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DISS. ETH No. 16518 Analysis of cell division in cardiomyocytes during development and disease A dissertation submitted to the SWISS FEDERAL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ZÜRICH for the degree of Doctor of Natural Sciences presented by PREETI AHUJA M.Sc (Hons) Microbiology, Panjab University, India born 11.03.1975 citizen of India accepted on the recommendation of Prof. Dr. Jean-Claude Perriard, examiner Dr. Elisabeth Ehler, co-examiner Prof. Dr. Matthias Peter, co-examiner 2006 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and the foremost, I would like to express my special gratitude to my supervisors JeanClaude Perriard and Elisabeth Ehler for their whole hearted support that they conferred through out my stay in the laboratory. I thank Jean-Claude for giving me the opportunity to carry out my research in his laboratory and for his helpful comments and support all the way through. Elisabeth had been extremely instrumental in shaping every aspect of my thesis work and without her keen interest, remarkable scientific expertise and friendly supervision my thesis would not have seen this day of light. I feel proud and privileged to have her as my adviser. Sincerely, I can never thank her enough for her constant support and assistance. I would like to thank Evelyne Perriard for help with cultures of cardiomyocytes and for all those warm and friendly discussions which I had with her during this time. During my stay in Jean-Claude’s laboratory, I came in contact with several fascinating people with whom I shared great companionship. Many, many thanks to Irina, Jaya, Alain, Stephan, Ruslan and Roman for creating a great atmosphere and good teamwork over the years. I would like to express my special thanks to Jaya Krishnan for critically reviewing my dissertation and for his support at many levels through out my work. I am also grateful to all my collaborators: Dr. Izabela Sumara, ETH, Zürich; Dr. João Relvas, ETH, Zürich; Prof. Matthias Peter, ETH, Zürich; Prof. William Trimble, University of Toronto, Canada; Prof. Thierry Pedrazzini, University of Lausanne Medical School, Switzerland and Prof. Shinji Satoh, Kyushu University, Japan. I am also thankful to all my project granting agencies: ETH and SNF (grant number 31.63486/00), the Gebert-Rüf Foundation, the SUK Grant to the Swiss Cardiovascular Teaching and Research Network, SCARTNet and the Swiss Foundation on Research of Muscle Diseases to J-C Perriard. Last but certainly not the least; I would like to let my family know how much they mean to me and that without their support and encouragement I would have not come that far. I am especially thankful to my husband Umesh for his continuous support and encouragement and i for being there and keeping up my spirits in difficult situations. I am greatly indebted to them, for which I can never thank them enough. I dedicate my thesis to my loving parents and to my dear husband. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT ............................................................................................................................. 1 ZUSAMMENFASSUNG ........................................................................................................ 3 CHAPTER 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 5 1.1 The heart.......................................................................................................................... 6 1.1.1 Heart development .................................................................................................... 6 1.1.2 The contractile tissue of the heart.............................................................................. 7 1.2 Establishment of cardiac cytoarchitecture in the developing heart............................... 10 1.2.1 Myofibrillogenesis in developing cardiomyocytes in situ ...................................... 10 1.2.2 Development of cell polarity during cardiomyocyte differentiation....................... 10 1.3 Differentiation and proliferative capacity of cardiac and skeletal muscle cells............ 11 1.4 Cardiac growth during development ............................................................................ 12 1.4.1 Hyperplasia and hypertrophy .................................................................................. 12 1.4.2 Cardiomyocyte cell cycle regulation ....................................................................... 13 1.4.2.1 Basic events of mammalian cell cycle............................................................... 13 1.4.2.2 Cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity during development .................................... 15 1.5 Myofibrillar and cytoskeletal organization of cardiomyocytes undergoing mitotic division .......................................................................................................................... 17 1.5.1 Regulation of myofibrillar organization during division ....................................... 17 1.5.2 Factors regulating myofibrillar organization during division ................................. 17 1.5.3 Ubiquitin and calpain dependent degradation pathways in muscle......................... 18 1.6 Cytokinesis and binuclearity of cardiomyocytes........................................................... 21 1.6.1 Major events contributing to cytokinesis ............................................................... 21 1.6 2 Interplay between microtubule and actin network during cytokinesis.................... 23 1.6.3 Actomyosin based contractile ring .......................................................................... 23 1.6.4 Factors regulating the formation of the contractile ring ......................................... 24 1.6.5 Rho GTPases as molecular switches in cytokinesis ................................................ 24 1.6.6 Role of septins in actomyosin ring formation ......................................................... 28 1.7 Cardiomyopathies.......................................................................................................... 29 iii Table of contents 1.7 1 Classification of cardiomyopathies ......................................................................... 29 1.8 Regenerative processes in myocardium during cardiomyopathies .............................. 33 1.8.1 How do Newt and Zebrafish heart regenerate? ....................................................... 33 1.8.1.1 Plasticity in the Newt limb ............................................................................... 33 1.8.1.2 Plasticity in the Newt and Zebrafish heart ........................................................ 34 1.8.2 Reactivation of DNA synthesis in the adult mammalian heart ............................... 35 1.9 Attempts to stimulate myocardial regeneration in higher vertebrates ......................... 36 1.9.1 Promoting cell cycle re-entry in cardiomyocytes.................................................... 36 1.9.2 Cellular transplantation ........................................................................................... 37 1.9.3 Cardiac progenitor cells........................................................................................... 39 1.10 Aim of the study ......................................................................................................... 40 1.10.1 Characterization of cardiomyocyte proliferation in the embryonic heart ............. 40 1.10.2 Determination of the mechanisms that cause uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis after birth in cardiomyocytes ........................................................... 40 1.10.3 Determination of the cytokinetic potential in cardiomyocytes during development and disease....................................................................................... 41 CHAPTER 2 Sequential myofibrillar breakdown accompanies mitotic division of mammalian cardiomyocytes ...................................................................................................................... 43 2.1 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................. 44 2.2 RESULTS...................................................................................................................... 45 2.2.1 Myofibrillar disassembly in cultured cardiomyocytes during cell division............ 45 2.2.2 Myofibrillar disassembly occurs in a sequential and biphasic manner................... 45 2.2.3 Myofibril disassembly also occurs in dividing cardiomyocytes in situ .................. 50 2.2.4 How is myofibril disassembly regulated? ............................................................... 54 2.3 DISCUSSION ............................................................................................................... 57 CHAPTER 3 Probing the role of septins in cardiomyocytes .................................................................... 62 3.1 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................. 63 3.2 RESULTS...................................................................................................................... 64 iv Table of contents 3.2.1 Expression of septins in heart during development................................................. 64 3.2.2 Localization pattern of different septins in cultured embryonic rat cardiomyocytes during cytokinesis .................................................................................................. 66 3.2.3 Effect of a cytokinetic inhibitor on septin localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes........................................................................................................ 69 3.2.4 Effect of Cytochalasin D on SEPT2 localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes during cytokinesis ................................................................................................... 69 3.2.5 Interference with different parts of the cytoskeleton has distinct effects on SEPT2 and non muscle myosin IIB distribution in embryonic cardiomyocytes .... 72 3.3 DISCUSSION ............................................................................................................... 74 CHAPTER 4 Analysis of the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes during development and disease ............................................................................................................................. 78 4.1 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................. 79 4.2 RESULTS...................................................................................................................... 80 4.2.1 Expression and localization of several actomyosin ring associated proteins in the heart during development.................................................................................. 80 4.2.2 Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in heart during hypertrophy ...... 83 4.2.2.1 β-adrenergic stimulated and hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart .......................................................................................... 83 4.2.2.2 Hypertension-induced hypertrophy of Dahl salt sensitive rats ......................... 84 4.2.2.3 Angiotensin over-expressing mice characterized by hypertrophy .................... 86 4.2.3 Localization of upregulated cytokinetic protein markers in diseased heart ............ 88 4.2.4 Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in an in-vitro model of hypertrophy ............................................................................................................ 88 4.2.5 Subcellular distribution of RhoA in primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes following the treatment with hypertrophy inducing agents .......... 91 4.2.6 Binucleation in hypertrophic neonatal rat cardiomyocytes..................................... 91 4.3 DISCUSSION ............................................................................................................... 94 v Table of contents CHAPTER 5 Additional results .................................................................................................................. 97 5.1 Role of calcium dependent calpain mediated degradation in dividing embryonic rat cardiomyocytes ........................................................................................................ 98 5.2 Expression of calpain-1 in heart during development................................................... 98 5.3 Disassembly of myofibrils delayed after treatment with NCO-700............................ 100 5.4 Role of Cullin3 in dividing embryonic rat cardiomyocytes........................................ 101 5.5 Subcellular distribution of Cullin3 in dividing embryonic rat cardiomyocytes .......... 102 5.6 Re-expression of Cullin3 in heart during hypertrophy................................................ 104 CHAPTER 6 General discussion and outlook ......................................................................................... 106 CHAPTER 7 Material and methods ......................................................................................................... 111 7.1 Isolation and culture of embryonic (ERC) and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) .......................................................................................................................... 112 7.2 Fixation and staining of cultured cardiomyocytes ...................................................... 112 7.3 PFA-fixed heart whole mount preparations ................................................................ 112 7.4 Antibodies used for immunofluorescence................................................................... 113 7.5 Confocal microscopy................................................................................................... 115 7.6 SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting ................................................................................ 116 7.7 Antibodies used for immunoblotting........................................................................... 117 7.8 Drug treatment............................................................................................................. 118 7.9 Cryosections ................................................................................................................ 118 7.10 Immunofluorescence of cryosections ....................................................................... 118 7.11 Densitometric analysis .............................................................................................. 118 7.12 Binucleation .............................................................................................................. 119 7.13 Statistical analysis ..................................................................................................... 119 7.14 Hypertrophic samples................................................................................................ 119 vi Table of contents CHAPTER 8 References ............................................................................................................................ 120 Publications.......................................................................................................................... 144 Curriculum vitae ................................................................................................................. 145 vii ABSTRACT The heart is the first functional organ in the embryo. Embryonic cardiomyocytes are able to divide in their differentiated state (Ahuja et al., 2004), unlike skeletal muscle cells where proliferation and differentiation are mutually exclusive processes (Zak, 1974). In the early postnatal period the cardiomyocytes stop dividing and growth is only achieved by increase in cell volume. However, in some species cardiomyocytes can undergo an additional incomplete mitosis where karyokinesis takes place in the absence of cytokinesis leading to binucleation. The co-existence of cell division and the terminal differentiated traits like contractile cytoarchitecture, in the embryonic cardiomyocytes presents an interesting biological puzzle that remains to be solved. Past attempts to understand cytoskeletal and myofibrillar organization during division provided only limited insight into the proliferative events in the embryonic heart. The work presented here tries to answer the following key questions related to mitotic division and the cytoskeleton of embryonic cardiomyocytes during division: (i) Does the myofibrillar cytoarchitecture of cardiomyocytes survive division? (ii) What factors regulate the organization of the myofibrils during division? (iii) Which kind of signals are responsible for progression to cytokinesis in embryonic cardiomyocytes and why does cytokinesis stop after birth? Analyses of triple-stained specimen of cultured cardiomyocytes and of whole mount preparations of embryonic mouse hearts by confocal microscopy revealed that, for differentiated cardiomyocytes to go through cell division, disassembly of the myofibrils has to take place. This disassembly occurs in two steps with Z-disk and thin filament associated proteins disintegrating before the disassembly of the M-bands and the thick filaments. After cytokinesis a rapid reassembly of the myofibrillar proteins to their mature cross-striated pattern can be observed. At present, it is not quite clear whether the myofibrils are only disassembled and the sarcomeric proteins are recycled again after cytokinesis or protein degradation of myofibrillar components takes place as well. However, results showed a drastic upregulation of ubiquitin expression, which spreads throughout the cytoplasm in dividing cardiomyocytes suggesting that protein degradation is important during this process. The observation that the myofibrils have to be disassembled for cytokinesis to occur might provide also a simple mechanistic explanation, why cardiomyocytes cease to divide after birth. With the hypertrophic growth that is caused by the increased workload on the heart after birth, this disassembly-reassembly process might be simply too costly from an energetic point 1 Abstract of view. In addition, too many cytoskeletal elements in the form of myofibrils might physically impede cell division as well. Another interesting finding of this work was the analysis of the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes during development. There are several key players known that are important for cytokinesis such as various small GTPases like RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42, septins along with their downstream effectors like ROCK I, ROCK II and Citron Kinase. The contractile ring has been investigated in postnatal cardiomyocytes from rat (Li et al., 1997a; Li et al., 1997b). However, these localization studies were restricted only to F-actin and non-muscle myosin and none of the other proteins involved in cytokinesis was analyzed. We demonstrate here for the first time that cardiomyocytes show a developmental stage specific expression of all the proteins such as RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, ROCK-I, ROCK-II, p-cofilin that are coupled with the formation of the actomyosin ring with high levels being only expressed at stages when cytokinesis still occurs (i.e. embryonic and perinatal). This suggests that downregulation of many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis may also be responsible for uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes after birth. Also we found out that when stressed myocardium tries to adapt to the increased work load during pathological hypertrophy there is indeed an upregulation of karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins, despite the fact that the mitotic cycle is usually not resumed under these conditions. The failure to undergo complete division could be due to the presence of stable, highly ordered and functional sarcomeres in the adult myocardium or could be due to the absence of degradation mechanisms (ubiquitin and/or calcium dependent) which facilitate division of embryonic cardiomyocytes by disintegrating the myofibrils. The developmentally regulated cessation of cytokinesis makes cardiomyocytes an interesting model system to investigate the factors involved in cell division. 2 ZUSAMMENFASSUNG Das Herz ist das erste Organ, das während der Embryonalentwicklung funktionell wird. Kurz nach der Geburt hören die Kardiomyozyten damit auf, sich zu teilen und das Myokard Wachstum kann nur durch die Vergrösserung des Zellvolumens erreicht werden. In manchen Spezies findet noch eine unvollständige Mitose statt, bei der es zu Kernteilungen ohne Zellteilung kommt, wodurch zweikernige Zellen entstehen. Wie das Nebeneinander von Zellteilung und hochgradiger Differenzierung mit kontraktiler Zytoarchitektur in embryonalen Kardiomyozyten genau funktioniert, ist eine noch ungelöste Frage. Bisherige Untersuchungen am Zytoskelett und der Anordnung der Myofibrillen während der Zellteilung im embryonalen Herzen haben nur bedingt aufschlussreiche Ergebnisse gebracht. Die hier vorgelegte Arbeit hat folgende Fragestellungen zum Thema der Zellteilung in differenzierten, embryonalen Kardiomyozyten: (i) Bleiben die Myofibrillen während der Zellteilung intakt? (ii) Welche Faktoren regulieren die Organisation von Myofibrillen während der Zellteilung? (iii) Welche Signalwege sind für die erfolgreiche Zytokinese in embryonalen Kardiomyozyten verantwortlich und warum gibt es nach der Geburt keine Zytokinese mehr in Herzzellen? Die Analyse von dreifach-immungefärbten Präparaten von Total präparaten kultivierten Kardiomyozyten und von ganzen embryonalen Mäuseherzen im konfokalen Mikroskop ergab, dass die Myofibrillen ab gebaut werden müssen, damit sich die Herzzellen teilen können. Dieser Prozess läuft in zwei Phasen ab: zuerst werden die ZScheiben und die dünnen Filamente entfernt, danach die M-Banden und die dicken Filamente. Nach der Zytokinese werden die Proteine der Myofibrillen rasant wieder zu quergestreiften Strukturen zusammen gebaut. Ob die Proteine der Myofibrillen während diesem Prozess auch vollständig degradiert werden, oder ob sie nach der Zytokinese wiederverwendet werden, ist momentan noch unklar. Die beobachtete Hochregulierung der Expression von Ubiquitin in sich teilenden Herzzellen könnte darauf hindeuten, dass der Proteinabbau für diesen Prozess eine Rolle spielt. Die Tatsache, dass die Myofibrillen auseinandergebaut werden müssen, damit es zur Zellteilung kommen kann, könnte auf eine einfache Erklärung, warum sich Herzzellen nach der Geburt nicht mehr teilen. Das hypertrophe Wachstum der Herzzellen im Fötus und aufgrund der erhöhten Belastung nach der Geburt könnte dazu führen, dass dieser Abbau einfach zu aufwendig wird und energetisch für die Zelle zu Kost spielig ist. Eine zusätzliche physische Behinderung könnte von der vermehrten Menge an Zytoskelett in Form der Myofibrillen kommen. 3 Zusammenfassung Zusätzlich wurde in dieser Arbeit die Fähigkeit der Kardiomyozyten zur Zytokinese während der gesamten Entwicklung untersucht. Von mehreren Proteinen ist bekannt, dass sie für die Zytokinese wichtig sind. Dazu gehören kleine GTPasen wie RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42 und Septin Proteine und ihre “downstream” Effektoren wie ROCK I, ROCK II und Citron Kinase. Bis jetzt wurde der kontraktile Ring, der für die Zytokinese gebraucht wird, in Herzzellen nur im neugeborenen Stadium untersucht (Li et al., 1997a; Li et al., 1997b). Die Untersuchungen beschränkten sich auf F-Aktin und die nicht-muskuläre Isoform von Myosin und es wurden keine anderen Proteine analysiert, die für die Zytokinese wichtig sind. Wir zeigen hier zum ersten Mal, dass Kardiomyozyten sich durch eine regulierte Expression der Proteine auszeichnen, die mit dem Aufbau des kontraktilen Rings zusammen hängen. RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, ROCK I, ROCK II, p-Cofilin zeigen eine hohe Expression in Herzzellen in Entwicklungsstadien in denen sich die Kardiomyozyten noch teilen, also embryonal und perinatal. Das könnte bedeuten, dass die Entkopplung von Kernteilung ohne darauffolgende Zellteilung in der postnatalen Phase darauf beruht, dass die gesamte Proteinmaschinerie, die zur Zytokinese benötigt wird, nicht mehr in ausreichenden Mengen in der Zelle vorhanden ist. Zusätzlich konnten wir feststellen, dass der Herzmuskel auf vermehrten Stress bei der krankhaften Hypertrophie mit einer Hochregulierung der Expression von diesen Proteinen reagiert, die mit Kernteilung und Zellteilung zu tun haben, obwohl es im Endeffekt dann doch zu keiner Zellteilung kommt. Mehrere Faktoren könnten der Grund sein, warum die Zellteilung in adulten Herzzellen nicht mehr möglich ist. Die Masse an hochgeordneten Myofibrillen im Zytoplasma könnte diese verhindern oder es ist auch denkbar, das Abbaumechanismen (vermittelt über Ubiquitin oder über Calpain), die im embryonalen Herzen den Abbau der Myofibrillen regulieren, nicht mehr angeschaltet werden können. Die entwicklungsstadienspezifische Hemmung der Zytokinese, die in dieser Arbeit beschrieben wird, bedeutet, dass Kardiomyozyten verschiedener Altersstufen ein interessantes Studienobjekt zur Analyse verschiedener Faktoren sein könnten, die für die Zytokinese eine Rolle spielen. 4 CHAPTER 1 Introduction 5 Chapter 1 Introduction 1 Introduction 1.1 The Heart The body requires oxygen and nutrients to carry on the process of life. A network of arteries and veins transport oxygen-rich blood to the body and carry oxygen-poor blood back to the lungs. At the centre of this continuous process is the heart, a beating muscle about the size of the fist in adult humans. The heart pumps approximately 5 litres of blood every minute, and each heartbeat circulates blood to both the lungs and the body. This is possible because of the heart’s complex internal structure. 1.1.1 Heart development The heart is the first functional organ in the developing embryo and arises from cardiac progenitor cells derived from the embryonic mesoderm in the so called heart field region (Fishman and Chien, 1997). The heart field initially forms as a crescent shaped structure in the anterior part of the embryo that later develops into a linear tube (Figure 1.1), (Viragh et al., 1989; DeRuiter et al., 1992). The tubular heart undergoes segmentation along the anteriorposterior axis, followed by rightward looping. This process results in the formation of the right and left ventricles, the atrioventricular canal, the sinoatrial, and the outflow tract segments (Olson and Srivastava, 1996; Srivastava and Olson, 2000). Subsequently, the ventral side of the heart tube rotates and forms the outer curvature of the heart, with the dorsal side becoming the inner curvature (Christoffels et al., 2000). These outer and inner curvatures play critical roles in the morphogenesis of the four chambered heart, as the individual chambers balloon out from the outer curvature due to the rapid proliferation of resident myocardial cells. These morphogenetic changes are accompanied by the expression of chamber specific genes exclusively in the ventral side and the outer curvature of the heart tube. In contrast, myocardial cells residing in the inner curvature are thought to be relatively undifferentiated, which allows this region to participate in the alignment of the right atrium with the right ventricle and the left ventricle with the outflow tract. This process results in the separation of the pulmonary and systemic circulations (Christoffels et al., 2000). All these developmental processes are characterised by several transcription factors that are required for cardiac development, morphogenesis, and/or chamber specification like Nkx2.5 (Lyons et al., 1995), GATA4 (Kuo et al., 1997; Molkentin et al., 1997), MEF2 (Lin et al., 1997), d and 6 Chapter 1 Introduction eHAND (Srivastava et al., 1995), Tbx5 (Hatcher et al., 2001) and HRT (Nakagawa et al., 1999). Figure 1.1: Summary of mouse heart development. Five major stages of heart development are shown: (1) cardiac crescent formation at embryonic day (E) 7.5; (2) formation of the linear heart tube at E8; (3) looping and the initiation of chamber morphogenesis at E8.5 to E9.5; (4) chamber formation; and (5) chamber maturation and septation and valve formation. See text for further details. ao indicates aorta; a, atrium; la, left atrium; lv, left ventricle; ra, right atrium; rv, right ventricle; ot, outflow tract; sv, sinus venosa; and pa, pulmonary artery (adapted from Bruneau, 2002). 1.1.2 The contractile tissue of the heart The contractile tissue of the heart (Figure 1.2 (a)) is composed of individual cells, the cardiomyocytes (Figure 1.2 (b)). These cells are the most active cells in the body, contracting constantly about 3 billion times or more in an average human lifespan to pump 7000 liters of blood per day along 100000 miles of blood vessels (Severs, 2000). To ensure proper function, two multiprotein cytoskeletal complexes have to be assembled correctly, the myofibrils and the intercalated discs. The myofibrils consist of actin and myosin filaments that are organized in a paracristalline fashion to ensure maximal contractile force. Their basic unit is the sarcomere, which is defined as the region between two neighbouring Z-discs, where the thin (actin) filaments are inserted (Figure 1.3). The thick (myosin) filaments are located in the middle of the sarcomere and held in place by another transverse structure, the M-band. A third filament system, the elastic (titin) filaments, seems to serve as a template for myofibril assembly as well as an elastic spring for the central positioning of the thick filaments during contraction (Figure 1.3a), (for review see Clark et al., 2002; Tskhovrebova and Trinick, 2003). According to the currently accepted theory, muscle contraction is caused by the sliding of thin and thick filaments past each other, resulting in a shortening of the sarcomere (i.e. the distance between two adjacent Z-discs). Simultaneous shortening of many sarcomeres thus leads to the development of a macromolecular force, resulting in muscle contraction (Figure 1.4) (Huxley and Simmons, 1971). In contrast to skeletal muscle in heart the antagonistic force of contraction is produced possibly by the extracellular matrix and the blood flowing from the atria into the ventricles. 7 Chapter 1 Introduction The second multiprotein cytoskeletal complex characteristic for cardiomyocytes is formed by the intercalated disc at the cell-cell contacts, which consists of three separate junctions; the adherens junctions, the desmosomes and the gap junctions (Figure 1.5). It is a specialized site for different types of cell-cell contacts that ensures intercellular communication, mechanical integration and force transmission between neighbouring cardiomyocytes to guarantee optimal contractile work of the cardiac tissue (for review see Perriard et al., 2003). Figure 1.2: (a) The contractile tissue of the heart is composed of individual cells, (b) the cardiomyocytes, whose cytoskeleton is formed by the assembly of myofibrils and intercalated discs shown in green (β-catenin) and red (myomesin) respectively (from Ehler E, King`s College, London, UK). Figure 1.3: (a) Schematic representation of the sarcomeric multi-protein complex. Three different filament systems, the thick (myosin) filaments, blue; the thin (actin) filaments, yellow; and the elastic (titin) filament, green are shown. The transverse structures are the Z-disc, black and the M-band, red which cross connects the filament systems (adapted from Agarkova and Perriard, 2005). (b) Corresponding electron micrograph of a skeletal sarcomere. The sarcomeric borders are delineated by the Z-discs (Z) in the middle of the I-band. The Mband (M) is seen as an electron-dense transverse band in the middle of the dark A-band. 8 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.4: Muscle contraction is produced by the sliding of actin filaments on myosin filaments. Each giant titin molecule extends from the Z-disc to the M-band, a distance over 1 µm. Part of each titin molecule is closely associated with myosin molecules in the thick filament; the rest of the molecule is elastic and changes length as the muscle contracts and relaxes (adapted from Alberts, 1994). Figure 1.5: The intercalated disc (ICD) is composed of three types of junctions visible in the electron microscope. Adherens junctions (Fascia adherens, FA) and desmosomes (D) are easily identified under electron microscope as electron dense material along the cellular membrane. Gap junctions (Nexus, N) bring the plasma membrane in close apposition (adapted from Wheater et al., 1987). 9 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.2 Establishment of cardiac cytoarchitecture in the developing heart 1.2.1 Myofibrillogenesis in developing cardiomyocytes in situ Cardiac myofibrillogenesis is the process of expression and integration of sarcomeric proteins, which results in the formation of regular structures known as myofibrils in the cytoplasm of cardiomyocytes. Studies with chicken explants (Imanaka-Yoshida, 1997) and whole mount preparations using immunohistochemistry and confocal microscopy showed sequential assembly of sarcomeric subunits. In the eight somite stage chicken heart, before the start of beating, the first organized complexes can be distinguished which are composed of alpha-actinin, F-actin and the N-terminus of titin (Ehler et al., 1999). Thick filament proteins as well as M-band proteins are distributed in a completely diffuse fashion at this time. While N-terminal (Z-disc) epitopes of titin can be visualized in a distinct pattern already at the 8 somite stage, C-terminal (M-band) epitopes show a slight delay in their alignment. Nevertheless they become concentrated soon enough so that titin can fulfill its role as an organizing molecule of the sarcomere. When the degree of organization of the M-band protein myomesin and that of the A-band protein MyBP-C is compared, it turns out that the myomesin striations precede double bands of MyBP-C (Ehler et al., 1999). Thus there is an existence of a basic framework for myofibril assembly, which consists of alpha-actinin at the Z-disc, myomesin at the M-band with titin spanning in between. Alpha-actinin serves together with titin for the anchorage of the thin filaments, whereas myomesin helps to integrate the thick filaments with the titin filaments (Ehler et al., 1999; Ehler et al., 2004). 1.2.2 Development of cell polarity during cardiomyocyte differentiation The overall shape of a cardiomyocte changes during differentiation from polygonal in the embryonic heart to rod shaped in the adult heart. This shape change is accompanied by a restriction of cell-cell contact proteins to the bipolar ends, where they form specific types of cell-cell contact, the intercalated discs (Hirschy et al., 2006). During the progressive differentiation of cardiomyocytes a gradual increase is observed in the size, number and complexity of organization of myofibrils from being a loose meshwork to myofibrils that are packed tightly together and are aligned strictly in parallel (for review see Rumyantsev, 1977; Pasumarthi and Field, 2002; Olson and Schneider, 2003). The organization of different cellcell contact proteins during embryonic heart development has been studied and it has been shown that restriction of the intercalated disc components to the bipolar ends is a slow process 10 Chapter 1 Introduction and is achieved for adherens junctions and desmosomes only after birth, for gap junctions even later (Hirschy et al., 2006). This suggests that the changes affecting adherens junctions and desmosomes during development are probably coordinated because both junctions provide together the mechanical coupling which is essential for the work of the cardiomyocytes, as suggested previously (Perriard et al., 2003). 1.3 Differentiation and proliferative capacity of cardiac and skeletal muscle cells Cardiac myogenesis has been much less studied in respect of interrelationship between proliferation and differentiation compared to skeletal myogenesis. Differentiation of cardiac muscle cells is different from that of skeletal muscle in two main features: first the synthesis of DNA and the synthesis of cell specific proteins are not mutually exclusive (Manasek, 1968; Rumyantsev, 1977). In the first phase of cardiac development, there is a very active proliferation of undifferentiated myogenic cells. These cells gradually initiate synthesis of myofibrillar proteins but continue to divide mitotically. As development progresses, the number of dividing cells decreases and synthesis of muscle proteins is accentuated (Zak, 1974). The term myoblast thus has a different meaning for skeletal and heart muscle. A myoblast in skeletal muscle is a cell withdrawn from the mitotic cycle and committed to synthesis of myofibrillar proteins. The cardiac myoblast, on the other hand, is a dividing cell simultaneously synthesizing cell specific proteins (Weinstein and Hay, 1970; Rumyantsev, 1972). The second difference is in the regenerative capacity of skeletal and cardiac muscle. Mature fibers in skeletal muscle have a population of undifferentiated cells which are wedged between the plasma membrane and the basement membrane of the muscle fiber. These cells are referred to as satellite cells (Mauro, 1961). The available evidence indicates that they are myogenic in nature (Moss and Leblond, 1971; Collins and Partridge, 2005). Unlike skeletal muscle, myocardium is very rarely a subject to neoplastic transformation, which is strongly suggestive of a stable inhibition of DNA synthesis and mitosis of the cardiomyocytes and of the absence of a pool of undifferentiated myogenic cells (Rumyantsev, 1977; Olson and Schneider, 2003). 11 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.4 Cardiac growth during development 1.4.1 Hyperplasia and hypertrophy During embryogenesis heart mass mainly increases by cell division of cardiomyocytes, a process that is called hyperplasia (Manasek, 1968; Weinstein and Hay, 1970; Chacko, 1972). After birth cell division ceases in mammalian heart and growth is mainly by increase in the cell size, i.e. hypertrophy (Figure 1.6) (Oparil et al., 1984; Klug et al., 1995). At the morphological level this transition from hyperplasia to hypertrophy after birth is marked by binucleation, where the cardiomyocytes completely loose their ability to finish cytokinesis (Katzberg et al., 1977; Ferrans and Rodriguez, 1987; Li et al., 1996). In rodents for example, the accumulation of binucleated cardiomyocytes starts around day four and by the third postnatal week 85-90% of the cardiomyocytes are binucleated (Clubb and Bishop, 1984; Li et al., 1996; Soonpaa et al., 1996), in pigs the number of nuclei can even reach up to 32 (Grabner and Pfitzer, 1974). In humans, the withdrawal of ventricular cardiomyocytes from the cell cycle occurs within the first few weeks of life (Zak, 1974) and as opposed to other species, the nuclei of cardiomyocytes in man and monkeys attain a higher ploidy level. Polyploidization in humans has been reported to be associated with aging and increased heart weight (Ferrans and Rodriguez, 1987). At present the cause for uncoupling of karyokinesis from cytokinesis is not known. In contrast, cardiomyocytes from lower vertebrates are capable to divide postnatally (Nag et al., 1979; Oberpriller et al., 1995; Matz et al., 1998; Bettencourt-Dias et al., 2003). In adult newt and zebrafish, heart tissue can even be regenerated after injury (Matz et al., 1998; Poss et al., 2002; Scott and Stainier, 2002; Keating, 2004; Raya et al., 2004). However, in mammals the general consensus is that cardiomyocytes in adults are postmitotic and do not retain any proliferation potential, (for review see MacLellan and Schneider, 2000; Swynghedauw, 2003; von Harsdorf et al., 2004). This view is supported in part by clinical observations, as myocardial regeneration has not been reported in diseases or injuries that lead to cardiomyocyte loss. Besides, primary myocardial tumors are rarely observed in adults (Soonpaa and Field, 1998). 12 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.6: Schematic representation of heart development at the cellular level. Prenatal heart growth is due to hyperplasia (cell division) with a switch shortly after birth to the hypertrophic phase, where heart growth is due to cell volume increase that ends in adulthood (from M.C. Schaub, University of Zürich, Switzerland). 1.4.2 Cardiomyocyte cell cycle regulation 1.4.2.1 Basic events of the mammalian cell cycle The two most important events during the passage through cell cycle are the S phase (Ssynthesis) and the M phase (M-mitosis), when chromosomes are replicated and segregated into the dividing cells, respectively (Figure 1.7(a)) (Nurse, 1994). The interval between the completion of M phase and the beginning of S phase, called the G1 phase (G-gap), and the interval between the end of S phase and the beginning of M phase, called the G2 phase, forms the links necessary to fulfil the image of the cell cycle as a circle. To ensure proper progression through each phase, cells have developed a series of orchestrated events that are governed by various molecular regulators such as cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), CDK activators, CDK inhibitors (CKIs) and members of the retinoblastoma protein family (Heichman and Roberts, 1994; King et al., 1994). Different cyclin-CDK complexes are required for distinct cell cycle events and their activities are regulated by CAKs 13 Chapter 1 Introduction (cyclinH/CDK7) and CKIs (p15, p16, p18, p19, p21, p27 and p57) in positive and negative manners, respectively (Hunter and Pines, 1994). Figure 1.7: (a) Four successive phases of a standard eukaryotic cell cycle. During interphase the cell grows continuously; during M phase it divides. DNA replication is confined to the part of interphase known as S phase. G1 phase is the gap between M phase and S phase; G2 is the gap between S phase and M phase (Alberts, 1994). (b) The principal events typical of animal cell division. For explanations see text (adapted from Nigg, 2001). In a typical somatic cell cycle, the M phase comprises karyokinesis (nuclear division) and cytokinesis (cytoplasmic division). The main purpose of mitosis is to segregate sister chromatids into two nascent cells, such that each daughter cell inherits one complete set of chromosomes. Mitosis is usually divided into five distinct stages: prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase. During 'prophase', interphase chromatin condenses into well-defined chromosomes and previously duplicated centrosomes migrate apart, thereby defining the poles of the future spindle apparatus. Concomitantly, centrosomes begin 14 Chapter 1 Introduction nucleating highly dynamic microtubules that probe space in all directions, and the nuclear envelope breaks down. During 'prometaphase', microtubules are captured by kinetochores (specialized proteinaceous structures associated with centromere DNA on mitotic chromosomes). Although monopolar attachments of chromosomes are unstable, the eventual interaction of paired sister chromatids with microtubules emanating from opposite poles results in a stable, bipolar attachment. Chromosomes then congress to an equatorial plane, the metaphase plate, where they continue to oscillate throughout 'metaphase', suggesting that a balance of forces keeps them under tension. After all the chromosomes have undergone a proper bipolar attachment, a sudden loss in sister-chromatid cohesion triggers the onset of 'anaphase'. Sister chromatids are then pulled towards the poles (anaphase A) and the poles themselves separate further towards the cell cortex (anaphase B). Once the chromosomes have arrived at the poles, nuclear envelopes reform around the daughter chromosomes, and chromatin decondensation begins 'telophase'. Finally, an actomyosin-based contractile ring is formed and 'cytokinesis' is completed. The figure (Figure 1.7(b)) summarizes the stages of the M phase. It also indicates where the major checkpoints exert quality control over mitotic progression and where mitotic kinases are thought to act (for review see Nigg, 2001). 1.4.2.2 Cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity during development Cell division is one of the key factors contributing to cardiac growth during early embryonic development. At the embryonic stage of heart, high levels of cyclins involved in G1, S, G2 and M-phase like D1, D2, D3, A, B1 and E in cardiomyocytes are expressed at both mRNA and protein levels (Yoshizumi et al., 1995; Brooks et al., 1997; Kang and Koh, 1997; Flink et al., 1998). Additionally, PCNA and the cyclin-dependent kinases Cdc2, Cdk2,Cdk4 and Cdk6 are highly expressed and their associated kinase activities are also present (Yoshizumi et al., 1995; Brooks et al., 1997; Kang and Koh, 1997; Flink et al., 1998). The protein expression profiles of cyclins D1, D2, D3, A, B1 and E and their associated kinases become progressively and significantly downregulated in postnatal cardiomyocytes compared to the levels observed in the embryonic stage. Moreover, the protein levels of cyclin A, B, D1, E and Cdc2 become even undetectable by immunoblotting in adult cardiomyocytes (Yoshizumi et al., 1995; Brooks et al., 1997; Kang and Koh, 1997; Flink et al., 1998). The kinase Plk1, involved particularly in cytokinesis, was demonstrated to be downregulated on both the transcriptional and translational level during heart development (Georgescu et al., 1997). The downregulation in the expression of cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases during normal development of cardiomyocytes have been shown to be concomitant with the specific 15 Chapter 1 Introduction upregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor molecules p21 and p27 (Li and Brooks, 1997; Burton et al., 1999). Expression at the transcriptional level of the third member of the Cip/Kip family, p57, has been reported (Matsuoka et al., 1995), but the protein is detectable only at the early stages in rat, however, it persists throughout life in man (Burton et al., 1999). A review of the expression patterns of these proteins is provided in Table 1.1. Gene Cyc D1 Cyc D2 Cyc D3 CDK4 p16 p18 p21 p27 p57 Cyc E Cyc A CDK2 RB p107 p130 E2F1 p53 p193 PCNA Cyc B cdc2 Cell Cycle Activity Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of restriction point transit Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of restriction point transit Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of restriction point transit Phosphorylates RB, promotes restriction point transit Inhibits Cdk 4 and 6; blocks restriction point and G1/S transit Inhibits Cdk 4 and 6; blocks restriction point and G1/S transit Inhibits Cdk 2, 4, and 6; blocks restriction point and G1/S transit Inhibits Cdk 2, 4, and 6; blocks restriction point and G1/S transit Inhibits Cdk 2, 4, and 6; blocks restriction point and G1/S transit Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of G1/S transit Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of S and G2/M transit Promotes G1/S transit when complexed with Cyc E Regulates G1/S transit by inhibiting E2F family member activity Regulates G1/S transit by inhibiting E2F family member activity Regulates G1/S transit by inhibiting E2F family member activity Transcription factor for cell cycle genes, inhibited by RB family Tumor suppressor that promotes cell cycle arrest or apoptosis BH3-only proapoptosis protein induces apoptosis at G1/S Required for DNA synthesis during S-phase and repair Cdk cofactor, positive regulator of G2/M transit Promotes G2/M transit when complexed with Cyc B Expression Level EMB NEO AD ++ ++ ++ ++ ND ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ + ++ + ND ND ++ ++ ++ ++ + + + + ++ + + + + + + + + ++ + ND + + + + ND ++ + + + +/ND - Table 1.1: Expression patterns of cell cycle regulatory proteins during cardiac development as determined by western blot (adapted from Pasumarthi et al., 2002). ++ refers to relatively stronger expression than +, - refers to not detected and ND, not determined. 16 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.5 Myofibrillar and cytoskeletal organization of cardiomyocytes undergoing mitotic division 1.5.1 Regulation of myofibrillar organization during division It is difficult to imagine, how embryonic cardiomyocytes can handle the highly dynamic processes of cell division and contraction of the myofibrils at the same time. Most cell types disassemble their cytoskeletal filaments before entering mitosis and microtubules reorganize to form the spindle apparatus, while actin and myosin make up the contractile ring that leads to cytokinesis (for review see Straight and Field, 2000; Sanger and Sanger, 2000; Nigg, 2001). So far, comparatively little is known on how cardiomyocytes manage to divide and beat in the developing heart. In the newt heart, where regeneration is possible also in the adult (Oberpriller and Oberpriller, 1974), differences in the proliferative potential of adult cardiomyocytes were detected (Bettencourt-Dias et al., 2003). Slowed proliferation was ascribed to cells from the future cardiac conduction system versus ventricular cardiomyocytes in the murine embryonic heart (Sedmera et al., 2003). There are few reports in the literature that describe seemingly intact myofibrils next to condensed chromosomes (Manasek, 1968; Kelly and Chacko, 1976), while others claim that myofibrils have to disassemble before cell division can occur (Goode, 1975; Rumyantsev, 1977; Kaneko et al., 1984). However, most of these studies were performed by electron microscopy, therefore presenting only a restricted view and a correlative study of proliferative events in the entire embryonic heart together with the investigation of cardiomyocyte cytoarchitecture is missing so far. One of the most conclusive studies carried out up to now that deals with the fate of myofibrils in dividing cardiomyocytes demonstrated by live birefringence microscopy that the cross-striated pattern was completely lost in newt cardiomyocytes undergoing cytokinesis, suggesting that myofibril disassembly has to occur before cardiomyocytes can divide (Kaneko et al., 1984). 1.5.2 Factors regulating myofibrillar organization during division The disorganization of myofibrils during mitosis in newt was explained as being a special kind of cellular adaptation allowing chromosomal movement and cytokinesis (Kaneko et al., 1984). However, the factors that regulate myofibril disassembly during mitosis could not be identified. The existence of a putative Z-disc degradation factor was postulated thirty years ago (Rumyantsev, 1977), however, its molecular nature is still unclear. 17 Chapter 1 Introduction Myofibril disassembly as it occurs during myopathies or muscle wasting is also characterized by degradation of Z-disc and I-band material before the rest of the sarcomere is affected (Taylor et al., 1995). During this process, degradation of myofibrils seems to be mainly regulated by the activity of muscle-specific calpain, which can associate with the I-band region of titin (Kinbara et al., 1998) and thereafter by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (Hasselgren and Fischer, 2001). 1.5.3 Ubiquitin and calpain dependent degradation pathways in muscle A number of catabolic disease states, including sepsis, severe injury, cancer, AIDS and diabetes are characterised by muscle wasting, mainly reflecting increased breakdown of myofibrillar proteins (Mitch and Goldberg, 1996; Hasselgren and Fischer, 2001). Intracellular protein breakdown is regulated by a number of proteolytic pathways that can be divided into lysosomal and nonlysosomal mechanisms. Among the nonlysosomal mechanisms, the ubiquitin-dependent and calcium-dependent pathways are particularly important for regulation of muscle protein breakdown (Attaix et al., 1998). Ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathway Most muscle proteins are degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome dependent proteolytic pathway. Proteins degraded by this mechanism are first conjugated to multiple molecules of ubiquitin, which is a 76-amino acid, 8.5 kDa residue, highly conserved and present in all eukaryotic cells (Ciehanover et al., 1978). Proteins targeted for degradation by the ubiquitindependent mechanism are conjugated to polyubiquitin, which enables them to be recognized by the large 26S proteolytic complex. This complex consists of the 19S cap complex and the 20S proteasome. The function of the 19S complex is to recognize, bind and unfold ubiquitinated substrates that are then funnelled through the 20S proteasome. Ubiquitination of proteins is regulated by different enzymes: ubiquitin activating enzyme E1, which activates ubiquitin to a high energy thiolester at its C-terminal Gly; ubiquitin conjugating enzyme E2, which transfers ubiquitin in its high energy state from E1 to a member of the E3 ubiquitinprotein ligase family, to which the substrate protein is specifically bound. This E3 enzyme catalyzes the last step in the conjugation process, i.e. covalent attachment of ubiquitin to the substrate, wherein the ubiquitin is transferred to an NH2 group of an internal Lys residue of the protein substrate to generate an isopeptide bond (Haas and Siepmann, 1997). The structure of the ubiquitin system is hierarchical in that a single E1 carries out activation of ubiquitin for all modifications, whereas substrate and tissue specificity are accounted for by different E2s 18 Chapter 1 Introduction and E3s. Individual E2s work in concert with specific E3s, which in turn have substrate specificity. A simplified scheme of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and the different steps involved in the ubiquitination of proteins is depicted in (Figure 1.8) (for review see Schwartz and Ciechanover, 1999). As illustrated in Figure1.8 ubiquitin is released from the substrate protein after its degradation, and because ubiquitin is a stable protein, it can be recycled in the proteolytic pathway. The de-ubiquitination process is highly regulated by several deubiquitinating enzymes that actually make up the largest known family in the ubiquitin system (Wilkinson, 2000). Recent studies suggest that de-ubiquitination may regulate the catabolic rate of ubiquitinated proteins. This process therefore offers an additional point of regulation of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Figure 1.8: The ubiquitin-proteasome system: sequence of events in the degradation of a protein via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. For explanation see text. Calcium dependent, calpain mediated proteolytic pathway Although the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is upregulated in septic muscle, it is unclear how the myofibrillar proteins are ubiquitinated and become substrates for the 26S proteasome (Hasselgren, 1999). It has been suggested that a calcium-dependent, calpain-mediated process releases myofilaments from Z-disc during sepsis. Calpains constitute a family consisting of at least 14 members that may be ubiquitous enzymes, such as µ- and m-calpain, or tissue specific proteins, such as muscle specific calpain 3, (p94) (Goll et al., 2003). Support for a role of calpains in muscle wasting caused by sepsis was provided in studies in which it was found that the gene expression of µ-, m-calpain and p94 was increased in muscle of septic rats 19 Chapter 1 Introduction (Bhattacharyya et al., 1991; Williams et al., 1999). A model has been proposed in which increased calpain activity provides an early, and perhaps rate limiting step in muscle wasting, accounting for degradation of Z-disc associated proteins and release of actin and myosin from the myofibrils which are then subsequently ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome. This suggests that the proteasome acts as a “cleanup” mechanism disposing of proteins released by the action of calpain on myofilaments (Figure 1.9) (Hasselgren et al., 2005). Figure 1.9: Calcium-calpain dependent release of myofilaments from the myofibrils which may be an early, and perhaps rate-limiting, component of sepsis-induced muscle wasting. In this model, myofilaments (actin and myosin) released from the myofibrils are ubiquitinated and subsequently degraded by the 26S proteasome (Hasselgren et al., 2005). The role of ubiquitin and calcium-dependent pathways in cardiomyocytes and particularly in dividing cardiomyocytes remains unknown. At present it is not clear whether the myofibrils in dividing cardiomyocytes remain intact or gets disassembled and whether protein degradation plays any role in the process. 20 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.6 Cytokinesis and binuclearity of cardiomyocytes Binucleation and terminal differentiation in cardiomyocytes occur shortly after birth in rodents and are concurrent with the irreversible withdrawal from the cell cycle (Rumyantsev, 1977; Clubb and Bishop, 1984). By the third postnatal week in rodents the number of binucleated cardiomyocytes increases by 80-90% (Clubb and Bishop, 1984; Soonpaa et al., 1996). A gradual decrease in radiolabeled thymidine incorporation, coincident with the appearance of binucleated cells, suggests that binucleation in cardiomyocytes arises as a consequence of nuclear mitotic division without cytoplasmic separation i.e. karyokinesis without cytokinesis (Rumyantsev, 1977; Soonpaa et al., 1996). At present the mechanism behind uncoupling of karyokinesis from cytokinesis is not known. This block in cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes is important from two aspects: first, if the expansion of differentiated cardiomyocytes for transplantation experiments is intended, this block has to be overcome. Second, if the factors that cause this block could be identified, they might be an interesting tool to introduce a similar block when uncontrolled cell division is not required. 1.6.1 Major events contributing to cytokinesis Cytokinesis is the final step of cell division. It is responsible for equal partitioning and separation of the cytoplasm between daughter cells to complete mitosis. There are four major events contributing to cytokinesis (Figure 1.10) which include (a) determination of the division site, (b) cleavage furrow formation followed by ingression of membrane, (c) midbody formation, and (d) cell separation (Glotzer, 2005). Much of the information on factors that promote cytokinesis has been gained from studies on yeast (Field and Kellogg, 1999), however; recently these studies have also been extended to higher eukaryotes. In eukaryotic cells, microtubules specify the position of the cleavage furrow (McCollum and Gould, 2001). In late mitosis, microtubules bundle into antiparallel interdigitating arrays in the central region of the mitotic spindle to form the spindle midzone. The spindle midzone has been shown to directly contribute to signalling to achieve the actomyosin based contractile ring assembly (Figure 1.10(a)), (Cao and Wang, 1996; Wheatley and Wang, 1996; Eckley et al., 1997). Two major classes of proteins from the spindle midzone appear important for that: first chromosomal passenger proteins, 21 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.10: The subprocesses and the structures that mediate cytokinesis (Glotzer, 2001). For explanation see text. Four major events contributing to cytokinesis which include (a) determination of the division site, (b) cleavage furrow formation followed by ingression of membrane, (c) midbody formation, and finally (d) cell separation. which localize initially to chromosomes and centromeres and subsequently to the midzone and furrow (Adams et al., 2001). The major chromosomal passengers include the inner centromere protein (INCENP), the Aurora-B/Ip11 kinase and Bir1/Survivin (Cooke et al., 1987; Bischoff and Plowman, 1999; Silke and Vaux, 2001). A second class of proteins includes microtubule motor proteins. The major motor proteins associated with the spindle midzone are the microtubule motor protein kinesins, specifically, those of the CHO1/MKLP1, KLP3A families and the polo kinase (Lee et al., 1995; Williams et al., 1995). It has been proposed that these proteins provide structural support for interdigitating microtubules at the midzone region, which may provide a platform to localize furrow components to the middle of the cell. Another alternative could be that motors help delivering the necessary molecules to build the cleavage furrow (for a review see Guertin et al., 2002). After the position of the division plane has been established, the next key step is the assembly of the contractile ring/cleavage furrow (Figure 1.10(b)). The furrow contains actin, myosin and other proteins that are organized into a contractile ring called the actomyosin ring. The ring then ingresses generating a membrane barrier between the cytoplasmic contents of each daughter cell (Wolf et al., 1999; Guertin et al., 2002). The ingressing furrow constricts components of the spindle midzone into a focused structure called the midbody (Figure 1.10(c)). In the final cytokinetic event, called abscission, the furrow seals, generating two daughter cells (Figure 1.10(d)), (for review see Satterwhite and Pollard, 1992; Fishkind and Wang, 1995; Glotzer, 1997; Oegema and Mitchison, 1997). 22 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.6.2 Interplay between microtubule and actin network during cytokinesis New developments suggest that the mitotic spindle and contractile ring are intimately linked during cytokinesis. It is believed that the interaction between the microtubule and actin cytoskeleton systems during cytokinesis could serve to position the cleavage furrow and initiate ingression (Mabuchi, 1986; Rappaport, 1986; Bray and White, 1988). It has been suggested that spindle microtubules may influence actin organization in the contractile ring, perhaps in part by affecting cortical flow of actin filaments to and from the equator. Canman and Bement (Canman and Bement, 1997) found that increased microtubule polymerization inhibited cortical actin assembly during cortical flow, whereas microtubule depolymerization increased cortical flow. These results imply that microtubules or their associated proteins might inhibit cortical flow of actomyosin. At present it is not known whether the continued presence of spindle microtubules is required for maintenance of the contractile ring throughout cytokinesis. It would be interesting to study the nature of this cross-talk between these two cytoskeletal networks. 1.6.3 Actomyosin based contractile ring As the name suggests both actin and myosin are essential components of the actomyosin ring. Concentration of actin at the position of the future cleavage furrow is one of the first signs of cytokinesis (Marks et al., 1986; Alfa and Hyams, 1990; Cao and Wang, 1990; Momany and Hamer, 1997; Wolf et al., 1999). Following actin, myosin II also assembles at the specified cleavage furrow plane, which is thought to provide the necessary force to constrict the cytoplasm of the dividing cells (Satterwhite and Pollard, 1992; Wolf et al., 1999). Type II myosin consists of a dimer of two heavy chains, each having two associated proteins, called the essential light chain (ELC) and the regulatory chain (RLC). Myosin heavy chain has a head domain, which has the motor and actin binding domains, and a long coiled-coiled domain involved in dimerization. In muscle, myosin forms long bipolar filaments which crosslink actin filaments and pull them together to bring about muscle constraction (Spudich, 2001). The force-producing ability of myosin II is regulated by phosphorylation, particularly through modification of the associated light chains (Trotter and Adelstein, 1979). Recently, it was shown that myosin II regulatory light chain phosphorylation, is required for the initial recruitment to the furrow, whereas the assembly of parallel, unbranched actin filaments, is required for maintaining myosin II exclusively at the equatorial cortex (Dean et al., 2005). 23 Chapter 1 Introduction Cardiomyocytes contain muscle myosin II (β and α) and non-muscle myosin IIB. During cytokinesis, myosin IIB concentrates in the cleavage furrow, but muscle myosin II is excluded from the central region of dividing cardiomyocytes (Conrad et al., 1995). It was shown that ablation of non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIB results in defects of cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes (Takeda et al., 2003). Apart from actin and myosin a number of substantial advances in recent years have identified other possible key factors regulating the formation of the contractile ring. 1.6.4 Factors regulating the formation of the contractile ring A successful strategy to study cytokinesis has been to focus on the regulation of the mechanical components responsible for contraction of the cleavage furrow-namely the actomyosin cytoskeleton. Actin has been postulated to act as scaffolding onto which the rest of the cytokinesis machinery assembles. Apart from actin and myosin other possible key players such as small GTPases like RhoA and its effectors ROCK I and ROCK II, citron kinase, formin-homology proteins, GTPase Cdc42, Rac and septins have been identified in regulating the formation of the contractile ring (for review see Wolf et al., 1999; Glotzer, 2001; Guertin et al., 2002; Glotzer, 2005). 1.6.5 Rho GTPases as molecular switches in cytokinesis GTPases are molecular switches that use a simple biochemical strategy to control complex cellular processes (for review see Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2002). They cycle between two conformational states: one bound to GTP (‘active’ state), the other bound to GDP (‘inactive’ state), and they hydrolyse GTP to GDP (Figure 1.11). In the ‘active’ (GTP) state, GTPases recognize target proteins and generate a response until GTP hydrolysis returns the switch to the 'inactive' state. In the active state, they interact with one of over 60 target proteins (effectors). The cycle is highly regulated by three classes of protein: in mammalian cells, around 60 guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) catalyse nucleotide exchange and mediate activation; more than 70 GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) stimulate GTP hydrolysis, leading to inactivation; and four guanine nucleotide exchange inhibitors (GDIs) extract the inactive GTPase from membranes (Schmidt and Hall, 2002; Moon and Zheng, 2003). 24 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.11: The Rho GTPase cycle. Rho GTPases cycle between an active (GTP-bound) and an inactive (GDPbound) conformation. In the active state, they interact with one of over 60 target proteins (effectors). The cycle is highly regulated by three classes of protein: in mammalian cells, around 60 guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) catalyse nucleotide exchange and mediate activation; more than 70 GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) stimulate GTP hydrolysis, leading to inactivation; and four guanine nucleotide exchange inhibitors (GDIs) extract the inactive GTPase from membranes (Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2002). Small GTPases of the Rho family are most prominent in carrying out essential functions of cytokinesis. Members of the Rho GTP family, namely Rho, Rac and Cdc42, mediate distinct actin-based cytoskeletal changes, despite the extensive crosstalk among all three signalling partners (Hall, 1998). Rho induces stress fibre formation, and potentiates myosin activity through phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chain (Amano et al., 1996; Kimura et al., 1996; Amano et al., 1997). On the other hand, activated Rac produces membrane ruffling and lamellipodia formation, whereas Cdc42 induces filopodia (Lamarche and Hall, 1994). How these proteins regulate the state of the actin cytoskeleton is currently under intense study. The role of Rho GTPases in cytokinesis is emphasized by the fact that inactivation of Rho GTPase in animal cells inhibits cytokinesis by disrupting normal assembly of actin filaments and triggering disassembly of the contractile ring (Kishi et al., 1993; Mabuchi et al., 1993; Larochelle et al., 1996; Moorman et al., 1996; Drechsel et al., 1997). RhoA GTPase is the most prominent of all and is known to play an important role in a wide spectrum of cell activities, including cytoskeletal organization, focal adhesion, cell division (cytokinesis in particular), cell migration, apoptosis and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy (Yanazume et al., 2002). In numerous cell types, inactivation of RhoA leads to a profound defect in cytokinesis, and in most cases cleavage furrow formation is completely blocked (Mabuchi, 1983; Kishi et al., 1993; Drechsel et al., 1997). It has been shown that Rho has a role in regulating the assembly of actin containing structures within the cortex during 25 Chapter 1 Introduction cytokinesis (Drechsel et al., 1997). There are several known effectors of RhoA GTPases, some of which have been implicated in regulating cytokinesis, (Figure 1.12), (Madaule et al., 1998; Yasui et al., 1998; Kosako et al., 2000; Eda et al., 2001). The activation of RhoA requires the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) ECT2 in mammals (Tatsumoto et al., 1999) or Pebble in drosophila (Prokopenko et al., 1999) for cytokinesis to occur. Figure 1.12: Role of Rho GTPases and their downstream effectors in cytokinesis (adapted from Glotzer, 2001 and Kinoshita and Noda, 2001). For explanation see text. Rho-kinase/ROK/ROCK is one of the targets for RhoA GTPase (for review see Riento and Ridley, 2003) and is known to phosphorylate myosin light chain at the cleavage furrow (Kosako et al., 2000) and at the same time, also to inhibit myosin phosphatase, thereby inhibiting the dephosphorylation of the myosin light chain (Matsumura et al., 2001) (Figure 1.12). Both the activities lead to an increase in myosin light chain phosphorylation thereby 26 Chapter 1 Introduction activating contractile ring formation for cytokinesis (Amano et al., 1996). A synthetic compound named Y-27632 (Ishizaki et al., 2000) has been shown to be a specific inhibitor of the ROCK family of kinases (Uehata et al., 1997). This compound has been widely used to identify and evaluate the involvement and roles of ROCK kinases in a variety of systems, including platelet activation (Klages et al., 1999), aortic smooth muscle contraction by various stimuli (Ben-Ze'ev and Geiger, 1998), hypertrophy of cardiomyocytes (Kuwahara et al., 1999), wound healing (Nobes and Hall, 1999), tumor invasion (Itoh et al., 1999), cell transformation (Sahai et al., 1999), and cytokinesis (Kosako et al., 2000). However, the mechanisms of kinase inhibition and cell permeation of Y-27632 as well as its specificity have not been fully addressed (Narumiya et al., 2000; Riento and Ridley, 2003). Citron kinase, also activated by RhoA has been implicated in cytokinesis, too (Madaule et al., 1998; Di Cunto et al., 2000; Eda et al., 2001), (Figure 1.12). It has been shown that overexpression of citron kinase results in the formation of multinucleate cells and that a kinase active mutant causes abnormal constriction during cytokinesis (Madaule et al., 1998). However, a targeted knockout of citron kinase in the mouse leads to a surprisingly mild phenotype. Mice lacking citron kinase are born with expected frequency and show defects mainly in the brain and not in the majority of the other tissues (Di Cunto et al., 2000). The downstream targets of citron kinase that are involved in cytokinesis are currently unknown; however, it is believed that citron kinase also phosphorylates myosin light chain at the cleavage furrow (Kinoshita and Noda, 2001). LIM kinase, another substrate of ROCK, indirectly contributes to assembly of the contractile ring by stabilizing filamentous actin. One factor that destabilizes filamentous actin is cofilin/ADF (Moon and Drubin, 1995). Cofilin is inactivated by phosphorylation (Moon and Drubin, 1995; Moriyama et al., 1996). ROCK phosphorylates LIM kinase (Maekawa et al., 1999), which in turn phosphorylates cofilin making it inactive (Figure 1.12). This helps in stabilizing pre-existing actin filaments for the formation of the contractile ring (Maekawa et al., 1999; Glotzer, 2005). The Rho family GTPase Cdc42 also plays a role in the ingression of the cleavage furrow (Drechsel et al., 1997; Prokopenko et al., 2000). In cultured mammalian cells, inhibition of Cdc42 leads to a delay in cell cycle progression, failure of chromosomes to bi-orient on the metaphase plate and to the formation of multinucleated cells (Yasuda et al., 2004). It has been suggested that there is an interplay between RhoA and Cdc42, both of which affect actin 27 Chapter 1 Introduction reorganization during interphase and play distinct roles in regulating cytokinesis (Figure 1.12), (Drechsel et al., 1997). The downstream targets of Cdc42 involved in cytokinesis are currently unknown (Wolf et al., 1999). The involvement of another Rho family member, Rac1, has been suggested to be important for maintaining proper cortical tension during cytokinesis (Gerald et al., 1998; Wolf et al., 1999). 1.6.6 Role of septins in the formation of the actomyosin ring Among these regulators of cytokinesis, septins are members of another family of cytoskeletal GTPases that has been shown to be important for cell division (for review see Kinoshita, 2003; Longtine and Bi, 2003; Hall and Russell, 2004; Martinez and Ware, 2004). However, it is still not certain which step in cytokinesis is dependent on septin function. Septins might be functioning in the selection of the site for furrowing, organizing the actin-myosin ring at that site, regulating the contraction of the ring or the attachment of the actin-myosin ring to the plasma membrane (Finger, 2005; Versele and Thorner, 2005). Alternatively, septins might be involved in the addition of new plasma membrane that presumably must accompany furrow formation, by associating with vesicles (Joo et al., 2005). Septins were first discovered in budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where they seem to function as scaffold proteins for the assembly of other ring components (DeMarini et al., 1997). In the budding yeast, temperature sensitive mutations in septins (Cdc3p, Cdc10p, Cdc11p and Cdc12p) result in cells that fail to form “neck filaments” beneath the cleavage furrow (Byers and Goetsch, 1976) and eventually lead to multinucleated cells (Hartwell, 1971). Despite considerable diversity in cytokinesis among different organisms, septins play a significant role also in the cytokinetic machinery of mammals (Kinoshita and Noda, 2001). A general role for septins in cytokinesis of higher eukaryotes was first suggested when it was discovered that the peanut mutation in Drosophila resulted in multinucleated syncytia within imaginal discs. This phenotypic effect was related to a mutation in a septin homologue, which apparently disrupted cytokinesis (Neufeld and Rubin, 1994). It has been proposed that septins may have additional functions in mammals, at sites where actin dynamics, cell surface organization and vesicle fusion processes are taking place (Beites et al., 1999). Recently it was shown in yeast that formation of the septin ring depends on the Cdc42 Rho-GTPase which involves cycles of GTP loading and hydrolysis by Cdc42 (Gladfelter et al., 2002) and may be the mechanism behind septin assembly and/or to recruit molecules to the septin scaffold during cytokinesis (Figure 1.12). 28 Chapter 1 Introduction Most cell cycle regulatory proteins have been shown to be downregulated in adult cardiomyocytes (Pasumarthi and Field, 2002). At present little is known about the expression of proteins that are associated with cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes during development with the exception of Polo-like kinase, which was shown to be downregulated in the adult heart (Georgescu et al., 1997). To find out whether neonatal rodent cardiomyocytes stop dividing due to a lack of the entire cytokinesis machinery or due to the downregulation of an individual regulatory component, it is important to investigate the eventual differences in expression levels or activity of all these proteins associated with the formation of the contractile ring at different stages in the developing heart. 1.7 Cardiomyopathies Cardiac dysfunction may have devastating physiological consequences for the organism. Heart disease is the predominant cause of disability and death in industrialized nations accounting for about 40% of all postnatal deaths (Schoen, 1999; Seidman and Seidman, 2001). In Switzerland, pathological cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure is one of the ten most common causes of hospitalization in patients older than 65 and the second most common in those over 80 years of age (Ess et al., 2002). As these two groups represent 17% of the Swiss population (Ess et al., 2002), understanding the causes and consequences of pathways leading to cardiac hypertrophy is of prime importance for the development of novel cost-effective and beneficial therapeutic strategies. 1.7.1 Classification of cardiomyopathies Cardiomyopathy is any type of heart disease in which the heart’s function is compromised. As a result, the heart muscle’s ability to pump blood is usually weakened. This condition is generally progressive and may lead to heart failure. Cardiomyopathies can be classified in a number of ways. They may be classified by anatomical abnormalities, by when the condition is noticed, or by how the heart is affected. Although there is some overlap, cardiomyopathies are often classified as ischemic (resulting from a lack of oxygen) and nonischemic. Ischemic cardiomyopathy is a chronic disorder caused by either recurrent heart attacks or coronary artery disease (CAD) - a disease in which there is hardening of the arteries on the 29 Chapter 1 Introduction surface of the heart. CAD often leads to episodes of cardiac ischemia, in which the heart muscle does not receive enough oxygen-rich blood. Recurrent ischemia may also lead to fibrosis and weakening of the heart, resulting in ischemic cardiomyopathy. The ischemic heart becomes stunned, stiff and non contractile, when the stress on the heart exceeds the blood supply. Nonischemic cardiomyopathy is a less common, progressive disease and frequently occurs in young people. There are two main types of nonischemic cardiomyopathies: i) Dilated cardiomyopathy and ii) Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) involves dilation or enlargement of the heart’s ventricles together with the thinning of the chamber walls and is usually accompanied by an increase in cardiac mass. This dilation reduces the pumping ability of the heart (systolic function) and therefore results in a reduced ejection fraction, often leading to heart failure (Figure 1.13). Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) or concentric hypertrophy involves abnormal thickening of the heart walls, predominantly in the left ventricular wall and the septum. The thickening reduces the size of the pumping chamber and prevents the heart from properly relaxing between beats (diastolic function) and therefore properly filling with blood (Figure 1.13). 30 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.13: Defects in sarcomeric or cytoskeletal components lead either to hypertrophic cardiomypathy (HCM) or dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), respectively (Miller et al., 2004). For explanation see text. In broad terms, there are two forms of cardiac hypertrophy, physiological, as occurs during embryonic or postnatal heart growth or even as a response to exercise, and pathological, as occurs in response to abnormal stress (for review see Olson and Schneider, 2003). Stress signals that induce hypertrophy include hypertension, pressure overload, endocrine disorders, myocardial infarction and contractile dysfunction from inherited mutations in sarcomeric or cytoskeletal proteins. Pathological hypertrophic cardiomyopathy frequently progresses to dilated cardiomyopathy which may be due, at least in part, to activation of apoptotic pathways (for a review, see Kang and Izumo, 2003). Under certain pathological conditions myocardial hypertrophy can be associated with an increased risk of secondary cardiac diseases such as infarction and heart failure (Hunter and Chien, 1999). The hypertrophic response is characterised by an increase in myocyte size, accumulation of contractile proteins, and by induction of immediate early transcription factors such as Fos, Myc, and Jun (Parker and Schneider, 1991), followed by characteristic changes in cardiacspecific gene expression (Komuro and Yazaki, 1993; Sadoshima and Izumo, 1997). These changes have often been referred to as reactivation of a fetal gene program, given the reexpression of several genes not normally expressed in the adult ventricle but seen in the embryonic and neonatal heart. Common examples are the re-expression of atrial natriuretic factor and genes for fetal isoforms of contractile proteins, such as skeletal α-actin, atrial myosin light chain-2, and β-myosin heavy chain in rodents and α-myosin heavy chain in humans. This can be accompanied by downregulation of genes normally expressed at higher 31 Chapter 1 Introduction levels in the adult than in the embryonic ventricle, such as α-myosin heavy chain and the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium pump, SERCA2a. Intrinsic changes in the cardiomyocyte mechanical performance, myocyte loss due to apoptosis and myocyte encasement by fibrosis have been postulated to mediate the eventual decline in myocardial function that occurs with the transition from hypertrophy to failure. Thus, investigators have been intrigued by extracellular signals and their cytoplasmic mediators, which together might explain these diverse aspects of hypertrophy (Komuro and Yazaki, 1993; Sadoshima and Izumo, 1997). Multiple candidate pathways have been identified including adrenergic signals, peptide growth factors and cytokines. The best studied are the G protein-coupled receptors and their signalling pathways (for review see Frey and Olson, 2003). Myocardial over-expression of their downstream effectors Gαq (Adams et al., 1998) or PKC (Wakasaki et al., 1997) results in pathological hypertrophy associated with contractile dysfunction and sometimes heart failure. Members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling cascades have also been shown to be important regulators of cardiac hypertrophy (for review see Sugden and Clerk, 1998). On the basis of sequence homology, MAPKs can be divided into three major subfamilies: extracellularly responsive kinases (ERKs), c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) and p38 MAPKs. Surprisingly, despite similar effects in vitro, over-expression of these signalling molecules in vivo in the mouse heart produces very distinct phenotypes (for review see Frey and Olson, 2003). It was shown that transgenic over-expression of MEK1, a MAPK kinase that activates ERK1/2, results in compensatory concentric hypertrophy (Bueno et al., 2000): a phenotype in contrast to the decompensated eccentric (chamber dilation) hypertrophy observed in MEK5/ERK5 over-expressing mice (Nicol et al., 2001). Many secreted factors are also induced with hypertrophy, including TGFβ (Takahashi et al., 1994), insulin like growth factor-1 (Donohue et al., 1994), angiotensinogen (Baker et al., 1990), the precursor of angiotensin-II, endothelin-1 (Yorikane et al., 1993) and cardiotrophin1 (Ishikawa et al., 1996) and can act on cardiomyocytes directly, evoking transcriptional responses at least partially similar to those induced by load itself (for review see MacLellan and Schneider, 2000). 32 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.8 Regenerative processes in myocardium during cardiomyopathies Vertebrates respond to injury through activation of committed progenitor cells or stem cells (e.g. bone marrow) or through proliferation of differentiated cells (liver or endothelial cells), (for review see Michalopoulos and DeFrances, 1997; Gage, 1998). In skeletal muscle, committed progenitor cells (satellite cells) located below the basal lamina are induced to proliferate in response to injury (Mauro, 1961). Skeletal muscle development or repair occurs along an orderly pathway, with commitment of stem cells to myogenic lineage (myoblasts), proliferation of myoblasts, and fusion of myoblasts to form myotubes. In contrast to skeletal muscle, a population of myosatellite-type cells, a potential source of regeneration, is not formed during cardiomyogenesis. The failure of the adult mammalian myocardium to reactivate the cell cycle accounts for the major difficulty in restoring the function to the damaged heart (Armstrong et al., 2000; Olson and Schneider, 2003). Induction of DNA synthesis as a response to stress or other factors has been described (Ferrans and Rodriguez, 1987; Capasso et al., 1992) however cytoplasmic division or cytokinesis does not occur, resulting in binucleation or polyploidy (Erokhina et al., 1997; Soonpaa and Field, 1998; MacLellan and Schneider, 2000; Pasumarthi et al., 2005). 1.8.1 How do Newt and Zebrafish hearts regenerate? Amphibians, such as newt, are the only adult vertebrates capable of regenerating their organs. This ability to regenerate large sections of the body plan is widespread in Metazoan phylogeny, and the discovery was an important aspect of the emergence of experimental biology in the eighteenth century (for review see Dinsmore, 1992). Although the processes of tissue restoration unfold in a different way in the heart, limbs and tail of the adult newt, the outcome depends on the plasticity of the differentiated cells that remain after the tissue removal. Recently, a similar observation was made in the teleost fish with Zebrafish’s regeneration of heart and other organs like fins, retina and spinal cord (Poss et al., 2002). 1.8.1.1 Plasticity in the newt limb The animal heals the wound, cells beneath the epidermis dedifferentiate, and regeneration occurs by local formation of a growth zone (blastema) that proliferates to form a new organ (Brockes, 1994; Brockes, 1997). Newt myotubes lack reserve cells, and the regeneration involves reversal from the differentiated state instead of recruitment of satellite cells. It has 33 Chapter 1 Introduction been suggested that the environment of the growth zone leads to a destabilization of the differentiated state (Brockes, 1997). 1.8.1.2 Plasticity in the newt and zebrafish heart After the removal of the apical region of the ventricle, the heart in both newt and zebrafish seals by contraction around the clot. Newt and zebrafish adult cardiomyocytes re-enter the cell cycle and divide in a zone that surrounds the clot (Figure 1.14), (Oberpriller and Oberpriller, 1974; Oberpriller et al., 1995; Poss et al., 2002). If the animal is injected with tritiated thymidine, to identify those cells that are in S-phase, approximately 10% of the cardiomyocytes in this region are labelled in a one-day period. In similar experiments with the adult mammalian heart, very few cells label after injury (Soonpaa and Field, 1998). Although both, regeneration of the heart and limb involves re-entry into the cell cycle, the cardiomyocyte is the only example to retain the differentiated state during regeneration, a feature that is also observed in culture, (for review see Brockes and Kumar, 2002) whereas in other tissues including the newt limb and zebrafish fin, the differentiated cells adjacent to the wound site first dedifferentiate to form a blastema which then gives rise to a fully formed organ (Scott and Stainier, 2002). However, no similar response to injury has been observed in the mammalian hearts. Perhaps the ability to regenerate tissue in several organs, including the heart, has been lost or diminished through evolution in parallel with the emergence of increased complexity of patterning and function. Similar to newt and zebrafish, a unique regenerative response was also documented in the MRL mouse strain after a cryoinjury to the myocardium (Leferovich et al., 2001). Currently it is not clear whether this phenotype observed in MRL mice is reflective of actual cardiomyocyte cell division or due to a wound healing response which is also observed in other tissues of these mice (Heber-Katz et al., 2004). Defining the molecular basis of cardiac regeneration in these unique model systems may provide fundamental insights into cardiomyocyte regeneration. 34 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1.14: Regenerating hearts and limbs. Following surgical removal of a portion of the zebrafish ventricle, cardiomyocytes (green cells) adjacent to the wound site (bright red) undergo proliferation, presumably due to signals (arrows) emanating from the wound. In contrast to the heart, the newt limb is composed of various differentiated cell types (indicated by cells of different colours). Following injury, cells adjacent to the wound epithelium dedifferentiate to form a blastema (green). These cells proliferate and subsequently differentiate to reform a properly patterned limb (Scott and Stainier, 2002). 1.8.2 Reactivation of DNA synthesis in the adult mammalian heart during disease Mammalian cardiomyocytes retain the ability to undergo partial cell cycle reactivation following hypertrophic stimulation. It was demonstrated by Rumyantsev that 9% of the myocytes in the ventricles after ventricular infarction respond by undergoing DNA synthesis around the perinecrotic area (Rumyantsev, 1974; Rumyantsev, 1977). The increase in the activities of the G1/S phase cyclin-Cdk complexes has been described, followed by 35 Chapter 1 Introduction progression of cardiomyocytes through the G1/S transition during development of pressure overload-induced LVH in rats (Li et al., 1998). Capasso et al. showed that ventricular loading is coupled with DNA synthesis in adult cardiomyocytes after acute and chronic myocardial infarction in rats (Capasso et al., 1992). Similarly, it was found that ventricular failure occurring after acute myocardial infarction (Reiss et al., 1996) or conditions of global ischemia (Reiss et al., 1993) upregulates the mRNA levels of PCNA and p-histone-H3 protein. In humans, it has been repeatedly found that after myocardial injury the ploidy level and number of nuclei per myocyte increases (Beltrami et al., 1997; Herget et al., 1997). The percentage of cardiomyocytes expressing PCNA increases in the diseased human hearts particularly in response to hypertrophy (Arbustini et al., 1993). Thus, it seems that the heart is endowed with a programme that protects against continuing proliferation of contracting cardiomyocytes. Nevertheless, the genetic programme for reinitiating DNA synthesis exists in post-mitotic cardiomyocytes. 1.9 Attempts to stimulate myocardial regeneration in higher vertebrates The definitive therapeutic goal in treating patients with heart failure would be either to preserve the number of pre-existing cells or to increase the number of functionally active force generating cells. Several approaches to accomplish this are currently under development. These include genetic manipulation of key cell cycle regulators to promote cell cycle progression, the exogenous grafting of skeletal myoblasts, fetal and neonatal cardiomyocytes and embryonic and mesenchymal stem cells into the infarcted myocardium (for review see Pasumarthi and Field, 2002; Reffelmann and Kloner, 2003; Dimmeler et al., 2005; Laflamme and Murry, 2005; Smits et al., 2005). Results of all these attempts to regenerate the diseased heart have been summarised in brief below. 1.9.1 Promoting cell cycle re-entry in cardiomyocytes Proliferating cells express high levels and activity of cell cycle promoting factors such as cyclins D1, E, A and B, Cdk2, Cdk4/6, and Cdc2 as well as E2F family members and low levels of the Cdk inhibitors p21 and p27 (Brooks et al., 1997; Poolman and Brooks, 1998). Strategies to induce cardiomyocyte proliferation have therefore been directed towards the genetic manipulation of cell cycle regulatory factors to promote cell cycle progression. For example, constitutive expression of c-myc, a transcription factor that is known to effect 36 Chapter 1 Introduction transcription of cell cycle genes in the heart, resulted in increased nuclei per myocyte and hypertrophy during fetal development (Jackson et al., 1990; Perez-Roger et al., 1999). In another study, transgenic hearts that expressed high levels of Cdk2 mRNA showed significantly increased levels of Cdk4 and cyclins A, D3, and E and augmented DNA synthesis in the adult animal (Liao et al., 2001). Over-expression of all three D-type cyclins (cyc D1, D2 or D3) in adult transgenic mice could stimulate DNA synthesis but did not result in a sustained myocyte proliferation under both normal and diseased conditions (Pasumarthi et al., 2005). Postnatal cardiomyocytes entering into mitosis have been demonstrated in cyclin A2 overexpressing mice but with no evidence of completing the division (Chaudhry et al., 2004). Viral proteins such as adenovirus E1A, SV40 large T antigen (SV40) bind to and inactivate Rb and p107, promote G1 exit of non proliferating cells. In postnatal cardiomyocytes, E1A expression results in partial cell cycle reactivation with cells arresting in G2/M (Kirshenbaum and Schneider, 1995). However, a compounding effect of reactivating DNA synthesis with E1A or SV40 was the increased incidence of apoptosis. Although most of these studies were able to demonstrate that re-entry of cardiomyocytes into the cell cycle there was no true evidence of cytokinesis (for review see Dowell et al., 2003; Regula et al., 2004; von Harsdorf et al., 2004). 1.9.2 Cellular transplantation Fetal and neonatal cardiomyocytes Cell transplantation has emerged as a potential therapy for heart diseases and the most appropriate choice for transplantation are cardiomyocytes themselves to the damaged heart as the implanted cells should possess the same electrical and mechanical characteristics as native cardiomyocytes and should enhance the cardiac performance by directly contributing to contraction. The first studies employed the use of fetal cardiomyocytes in the infarcted and failing myocardium (Leor et al., 1996) and the results demonstrated that the cardiac environment was favourable to the engrafted fetal cardiomyocytes (Watanabe et al., 1998). However, fetal and neonatal cardiomyocytes seem to be highly sensitive to ischemic injury and their therapeutic use might ultimately require additional interventions. Moreover, human cardiomyocytes are difficult to obtain and are limited with respect to their ability to be amplified in culture. The use of fetal cardiomyocytes may also face ethical and political difficulties in human application (for review see Reinlib and Field, 2000). 37 Chapter 1 Introduction Skeletal myoblasts Cell based cardiac repair began with the transplantation of autologous skeletal muscle satellite cells, progenitor cells that normally mediate regeneration of skeletal muscle (Koh et al., 1993; Chiu et al., 1995; Taylor et al., 1998). In many species such as dogs, rabbits and rats engraftment of skeletal myoblasts successfully colonised injured cardiac tissue (Murry et al., 1996; Taylor et al., 1998; Pouzet et al., 2000). Survival has been shown for 12 weeks after the transplantation into normal hearts (Reinecke et al., 2002), up to 18 weeks in cryoinjured myocardium (Chiu, 1999), and Pouzet et al. reported survival along with improved cardiac performance over a period of 1 year after transplantation (Pouzet et al., 2000). While the possibility of amplifying satellite cells in vitro, and potentially continuing proliferation after transplantation are desirable advantages of skeletal myoblasts, the central question whether they can function as cardiomyocytes, including adaptation to chronic workload and integration into the host has not been answered so far (for review see Laflamme and Murry, 2005). Stem cells Stem cells possess a great potential for regenerative medicine particularly if there are difficulties obtaining sufficient numbers of donor cells. Embryonic stem cells, which are totipotent cells derived from the inner cell mass of blastocytes, can differentiate into true cardiomyocytes, making them in principle an unlimited source of transplantable cells for cardiac repair although immunological and ethical constraints exist (for review see Smits et al., 2005). Somatic stem cells are an attractive option to explore for transplantation as they are autologous, but their differentiation potential is more restricted than that of embryonic stem cells. Currently, the major sources of somatic cells used for basic research and in clinical trials originate from the bone marrow which includes hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). To date, only mesenchymal stem cells seem to form cardiomyocytes, and only a small percentage of this population will do so in vitro or in vivo (for review see Smits et al., 2005). 38 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.9.3 Cardiac progenitor cells The dogma that the heart is a postmitotic non-regenerating organ has recently been challenged. Studies have reported the existence of resident cardiac stem cells (Beltrami et al., 2003; Oh et al., 2003; Laugwitz et al., 2005). Sylvia Evans and coworkers showed that a subpopulation of cells in the anterior pharynx expresses the homeobox gene islet-1 (isl1) (Cai et al., 2003). Expression of isl1 is lost when these cells differentiate into cardiomyocytes. Interestingly, some isl1+ cells can be identified in the mature hearts of newborn rodents and humans where they remain undifferentiated (Laugwitz et al., 2005). However, it remains to be determined whether isl1+ cells exist in the adult heart beyond the early postnatal period. Moreover, their ability to be engrafted in the heart to regenerate myocardium, to electrically couple, and to contribute to cardiac work remains to be tested (for review see Parmacek and Epstein, 2005). Piero Anversa and colleagues reported the discovery of a resident population of cardiac stem cells (Beltrami et al., 2003). These cells are negative for blood lineage markers CD34, CD45, CD20, CD45RO and CD8 (Lin−) and positive for c-kit, the receptor for stem cell factor (SCF). In the adult rat myocardium, Lin− c-kit pos cells are relatively rare but more prevalent than the isl1+ progenitors described above. c-kit positive clones also differentiate into smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells, indicative of their possible pluripotency. In humans, significant myocardial regeneration is not observed following myocardial infarction, suggesting that if c-kit positive cardiac stem cells exist, they are either nonresponsive or inhibited from migrating and differentiating in response to acute myocardial infarction. Alternatively, the resident population of cardiac stem cells becomes senescent over time as most myocardial infarctions occur in older patients (for review see Parmacek and Epstein, 2005). Schneider and colleagues at the same time also reported a resident population of cardiac progenitors that copurifies with the nonmyocyte fraction and is characterized by expression of stem cell antigen 1(Sca-1+) (Oh et al., 2003). However, it remains to be determined whether the subpopulation of cardiac Sca-1+ cells exists with restricted developmental potential to differentiate at high frequency into cardiac progenitors or cardiomyocytes (for review see Parmacek and Epstein, 2005). These groups suggested that under normal conditions cardiac stem cells are quiescent and able to revive during cardiac hypertrophy or after myocardial infarction, but it seems even if 39 Chapter 1 Introduction progenitor properties of these cells exist, the turnover is too slow to repair the damaged myocardium (for review see Laflamme and Murry, 2005). 1.10 Aim of the study 1.10.1 Characterization of cardiomyocyte proliferation in the embryonic heart The first part of the project deals with the characterization of cardiomyocyte proliferation in the embryonic heart as well as the fate of myofibrils in proliferating cardiomyocytes. We also tried to investigate the lineage relationship of the overtly differentiated cardiac phenotype and the capacity to divide, in other words to try to define a precursor cardiomyocyte population with high proliferation potential. In order to determine whether differentiated cardiomyocytes are capable of undergoing cell division, we used high resolution confocal microscopy on triple stained specimen of cultured embryonic cardiomyocytes as well as by analysis of dividing cardiomyocytes in situ by using whole mount preparations of embryonic hearts. Using this method we were able to determine the state of myofibrillar organization in cardiomyocytes that had been ascertained as undergoing division by virtue of their expression of proliferation markers. The factors that regulate myofibril disassembly during mitosis were also looked into. The existence of a putative Z-disc degradation factor was postulated thirty years ago (Rumyantsev, 1977), however, its molecular nature is still unclear. Numerous proteins that are either integral components or transiently associated with the Z-disc have been identified in the recent years (Faulkner et al., 2001), but for none of them has a direct involvement in the organization of cardiomyocyte proliferation been shown so far. 1.10.2 Determination of the mechanisms that cause uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis after birth in cardiomyocytes The second part aimed at elucidating the mechanisms that cause the uncoupling of the events of karyokinesis and cytokinesis, which is typical for postnatal cardiomyocytes. Most cell cycle regulatory proteins have been shown to be downregulated in adult cardiomyocytes (Pasumarthi and Field, 2002), but at present little is known about the expression of proteins that are associated with cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes during development with the exception of Polo-like kinase, which was shown to be downregulated in the adult heart (Georgescu et al., 1997). To find out whether neonatal rodent cardiomyocytes stop dividing due to a lack of the entire cytokinesis machinery or due to the downregulation of an individual regulatory 40 Chapter 1 Introduction component, it is important to investigate the eventual differences in expression levels or activity of all these proteins in different stages in the developing heart. We examined the expression pattern of septins, the GTP-binding proteins that have been shown to be involved in cytokinesis from yeast to vertebrates in the heart during development and their localization in dividing cardiomyocytes. We wanted to determine whether septin expression patterns can be correlated to the cessation of cytokinesis during heart development. In addition we studied any effects on septin localization in cultured cardiomyocytes after interfering with the ROCK signaling pathway, with the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton or the activity of myosin. 1.10.3 Determination of the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes during development and disease The third part aims at determining the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes in the adult and diseased heart despite the fact that mitotis is usually not resumed under these conditions. In this part we set out to investigate (i) the expression pattern of Rho GTPases; (RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1) and their direct modulators like ROCK I, ROCKII, p-cofilin that are responsible for the formation of the cleavage furrow, in embryonic heart, (ii) whether these signals are repressed in neonatal and adult heart, which might account for the uncoupling of karyokinesis from cytokinesis after birth and (iii) and whether there is re-expression of these markers responsible for furrow formation again in adult and diseased heart even though mitosis is usually not resumed under these conditions. To answer these interesting questions, expression and localization of actomyosin based contractile ring components were checked at various developmental stages of the heart. In addition, to determine whether cardiomyocytes make an attempt to go through complete cell division during the diseased state, different mouse and rat models of pathological hypertrophy were probed for re-expression of karyokinetic and cytokinetic markers. To test this wellestablished in vitro and in vivo mouse and rat models like β-adrenergic stimulated and hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart, hypertension-induced hypertrophy of Dahl salt sensitive rats and angiotensin over-expressing mice characterized by hypertrophy were investigated. For an in vitro model, primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes grown in serum free medium containing hypertrophy inducing agents such as phenylephrine, isoproterenol and norepinephrine were investigated. These results should provide important information on the process of cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes in general and on the influence of the highly specialised cardiac cytoskeleton, namely the myofibrils, on this process in particular. Due to the intrinsic changes in their cytokinetic behaviour before and 41 Chapter 1 Introduction after birth, cardiomyocytes might provide an interesting model system to dissect the role of different components involved in the process of cytokinesis. Understanding these correlations is not only important for cardiomyocyte biology but may become essential in the study of neoplastic transformation. 42 CHAPTER 2 Sequential myofibrillar breakdown accompanies mitotic division of mammalian cardiomyocytes Preeti Ahuja1, Evelyne Perriard1, Jean-Claude Perriard1 and Elisabeth Ehler2,3 1 2 Institute of Cell Biology, ETH Zurich-Honggerberg, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland The Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King’s College London, London SE1 1UL, UK 3 The Cardiovascular Division, King’s College London Journal of Cell Science 117(15): 3295-3306 (2004) 43 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes 2.1 SUMMMARY The contractile tissue of the heart is composed of individual cardiomyocytes. During mammalian embryonic development, heart growth is achieved by cell division while at the same time the heart is already exerting its essential pumping activity. There is still some debate whether the proliferative activity is carried out by a less differentiated, stem cell-like type of cardiomyocytes or whether embryonic cardiomyocytes are able to perform both of these completely different dynamic tasks, contraction and cell division. Our analysis of triplestained specimen of cultured embryonic cardiomyocytes and of whole mount preparations of embryonic mouse hearts by confocal microscopy revealed that differentiated cardiomyocytes are indeed able to proliferate. However, to go through cell division, a disassembly of the contractile elements, the myofibrils, has to take place. This disassembly occurs in two steps with Z-disc and thin (actin) filament associated proteins getting disassembled before disassembly of the M-bands and the thick (myosin) filaments happens. After cytokinesis reassembly of the myofibrillar proteins to their mature cross-striated pattern can be seen. Another interesting observation was that the cell-cell contacts remain seemingly intact during division, probably reflecting the requirement of intact integration sites of the individual cells in the contractile tissue. Our results suggest that embryonic cardiomyocytes have developed an interesting strategy to deal with their major cytoskeletal elements, the myofibrils, during mitosis. The complex disassembly-reassembly process might also provide a mechanistic explanation, why cardiomyocytes cede to divide postnatally. 44 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes 2.2 RESULTS 2.2.1 Myofibrillar disassembly in cultured cardiomyocytes during cell division To study the changes taking place in the cytoskeleton during cell division we first investigated primary cultures of embryonic cardiomyocytes by triple immunofluorescence. Dividing cells were unambiguously identified by staining with an antibody specific for phosphorylated histone H3 (Figure 2.1 B, E, H, K, N). Phosphorylation of Serine 10 in histone H3 is a prerequisite for the condensation of chromosomes during mitosis (Wei et al., 1998). The behaviour of the microtubular cytoskeleton shows no difference in dividing cardiomyocytes compared to other cultured cells (Figure 2.1 C, F, I, L, O). The microtubules are assembled to a spindle (Figure 2.1 F, I, L), which serves for segregation of the chromosomes and finally concentrated in the midzone region before the cells pinch off each other (Figure 2.1 O, arrow). A dramatic difference can be observed when the organization of the myofibrils is observed during cell division (Figure 2.1 A, D, G, J, M). Sarcomeric alpha-actinin, which is a component of the Z-disc, is localized in a cross-striated pattern in interphase cardiomyocytes as well as in cardiomyocytes in early prophase when the chromosomes are not yet condensed (right hand cell in Figure 2.1 A). In metaphase however, the localization of alpha-actinin becomes completely diffuse and stays that way during telophase (Figure 2.1 D, G, J, left hand cell in A). Only in late cytokinesis as demonstrated in Figure 2.1 M, is the cross-striated localization pattern of alpha-actinin re-established. These results suggest that the myofibrils undergo a disassembly-reassembly cycle during cell division in cultured cardiomyocytes. 2.2.2 Myofibrillar disassembly occurs in sequential and biphasic manner To find out whether all components of the sarcomere are affected in a similar way during division we stained cultured cardiomyocytes for alpha-actinin, a Z-disc and an M-band epitope of titin, cardiac alpha-actin, sarcomeric myosin heavy chain, myosin binding proteinC and for the M-band protein myomesin. In dividing cardiomyocytes in metaphase, as identified by the visualization of condensed chromosomes with the staining for 45 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes phosphorylated histone H3 (Figure 2.2 B, D, F, H, J, L, N), interesting differences in the organization can be observed. While Z-disc associated proteins like alpha-actinin and also Z- Figure 2.1: Single confocal sections of immunostained cultured embryonic cardiomyocytes at different cell division stages showing the degree of disassembly of the myofibrils with an antibody against the Z-disc protein alpha-actinin (A, D, G, J, M). The spindle apparatus is visualized by staining for tubulin (C, F, I, L, O), while dividing cells can be identified by staining with an antibody that specifically recognizes phosphorylated histone H3 (B, E, H, K, N). In prophase, when the nuclear membrane is still intact, clear cross-striations can be seen for alpha-actinin (panel A, right hand cell). During metaphase, when the condensed chromosomes are arranged in the middle of the cell, the signal for alpha-actinin gets diffuse (panel D) and stays like that during early anaphase (panel G), when the chromosomes start to be pulled towards the poles, telophase (panel J) and early cytokinesis (panel A, left hand cell), when the signal for phosphorylated histone H3 disappears. Reassembly of alpha- actinin to a cross-striated pattern starts in late cytokinesis (panel M). The arrow in O indicates, where the daughter cells are being pinched off. Bar represents 10 µm. 46 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes disc epitopes of titin attain already a diffuse localization pattern at this stage (Figure 2.2 A, C), the organization of the thick filaments, as indicated by the localization of sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (Figure 2.2 G), myosin binding protein-C (Figure 2.2 I) and of the Mband with myomesin (Figure 2.2 K) and an M-band epitope of titin (Figure 2.2 M) remains remarkably intact despite the presence of condensed chromosomes in these cells. Due to the different states of contraction, it is very difficult to identify well separated I-bands in cultured cardiomyocytes; nevertheless the localization of cardiac actin appears more diffuse in metaphase cardiomyocytes as well (Figure 2.2 E). Therefore there is an interesting delay in the way different parts of the sarcomere are disassembled during cell division with Z-discs and thin filaments attaining a diffuse localization pattern before A-band components. In order to determine whether thick filaments and M-bands remain intact throughout cell division and how myofibril reassembly occurs, we compared the localization pattern of different sarcomeric proteins in cultured cardiomyocytes in anaphase, telophase and late cytokinesis. The different stages of the cell cycle were judged as above either by staining for phosphorylated histone H3 (Figure 2.3 D-F) or for tubulin (Figure 2.3 J-L; P-R). While cardiac alpha-actin shows a completely diffuse localization pattern in anaphase cardiomyocytes (Figure 2.3 A), M-bands and A-bands only start to get disassembled at this stage as indicated by the partially still cross-striated staining pattern obtained for myomesin and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (Figure 2.3 B and C, respectively). Complete myofibril disassembly as indicated by diffuse staining for M-band, thin and thick filament proteins is only seen in cardiomyocytes in telophase (Figure 2.3 G, H, I). Reassembly of myofibrils occurs quite fast after cytokinesis since cross-striations for all investigated sarcomeric proteins can be seen soon after the cells have started to segregate from each other (Figure 2.3 M, N, O). These results suggest that in dividing cardiomyocytes a biphasic disassembly of myofibrils occurs, with Z-disc and thin filament associated components being disassembled before A- and M-bands. Nevertheless, in order to be able to go through telophase and to complete cytokinesis, disassembly of the entire myofibrils seems to occur in cardiomyocytes. After cell division reassembly happens soon, leading to a cross-striated localization pattern that is indistinguishable from neighbouring non-dividing cells. 47 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Figure 2.2: Single confocal sections showing the comparison of the disassembly level of various sarcomeric proteins present in cultured cardiomyocytes during metaphase (B, D, F, H, J, L, N). While cardiac alpha-actin (E) as well as Z-disc associated epitopes like alpha-actinin (A) and titin T12 (C) display a mostly diffuse staining pattern throughout the entire cytoplasm already at this stage; sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (G), myosin binding protein-C (I) and M-band associated epitopes like myomesin (K) and titin T51 (M) show still an intact localization pattern. Bar represents 10 µm. 48 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Figure 2.3: Localization pattern of different sarcomeric proteins in cultured cardiomyocytes during later stages of mitosis in single confocal sections. Late metaphase/early anaphase was visualized by staining for phosphorylated histone H3 (D-F), the later stages of mitosis by staining for tubulin (J-L and P-R). The sarcomeric protein stained for in the left column was cardiac alpha-actin, in the middle myomesin and right sarcomeric myosin heavy chain as indicated above. While cardiac alpha-actin (A) is completely diffuse at late metaphase, myomesin (B) and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (C) only start to disassemble at this stage (small arrowheads point at still intact myofibrils). Only when chromosomes are being segregated, cardiac alpha-actin 49 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes (G), myomesin (H) as well as myosin heavy chain (I) show a diffuse pattern with some remaining aggregates, especially in the case of the latter. During cytokinesis, as identified by tubulin concentration in the midbody (PR), all sarcomeric proteins start reassembly to myofibrils and display a cross-striated pattern again (M-O). The arrows point at the dividing cells. Bar represents 10 µm. To exclude that these differences in myofibril assembly of different parts of the sarcomere are caused by slight temporal differences between the analyzed cardiomyocytes we investigated the organization of the Z-disc protein alpha-actinin and MyBP-C as marker of the thick filaments in the same cell (Figure 2.4). In interphase cells cross-striations can be seen for both sarcomeric components (Figure 2.4 A-C). However, in metaphase a clear distinction in the organization is apparent with alpha-actinin being mainly diffuse (Figure 2.4 E), while MyBPC displays still distinct double bands in the same cell (Figure 2.4 F). Only by anaphase both proteins have attained a diffuse localization pattern with some aggregated material (Figure 2.4 H, I), which is retained in early telophase (Figure 2.4 K, L). These observations show clearly that myofibril disassembly happens in at least two steps, with Z-disc material being disassembled before the thick filaments. A compilation of the state of assembly for different parts of the sarcomere at a given stage of cell division can be found in Table 2.1. 2.2.3 Myofibril disassembly also occurs in dividing cardiomyocytes in situ Cultured cardiomyocytes display important differences compared to cardiomyocytes in situ. There are obvious differences in cellular shape and in the surrounding of the cells, but there are also differences in cellular processes like responsiveness to growth factors (Armstrong et al., 2000) and in myofibrillogenesis (Ehler et al., 1999). Therefore we wanted to find out whether the disassembly of myofibrils with the delay between different parts of the sarcomere could also be observed in cardiomyocytes in situ. Whole mount preparations of embryonic mouse hearts were stained for phosphorylated histone H3 and at the same time for the cellcell contact protein beta-catenin to be able to visualize the cell borders. In addition, different components of the sarcomere were stained and the whole mount preparations were subsequently analysed by confocal microscopy. Interestingly, also in situ myofibrils are disassembled in dividing cardiomyocytes with a similar delay between different parts of the sarcomere as in cultured cardiomyocytes. In metaphase cardiomyocytes, Z-disc associated epitopes like alpha-actinin or titin T12 are already completely diffuse (Figure 2.5 B, E) while 50 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Figure 2.4: Sequential disassembly of different parts on the sarcomere analyzed in single confocal sections. Embryonic rat cardiomyocytes were stained for alpha-actinin (panel B, E, H, K; red in overlay A, D, G, J) and for MyBP-C (panel C, F, I, L; green in overlay) as indicated above the columns. The stage of cell division was identified by staining for tubulin (blue in overlay). In the interphase cell, clear cross-striations can be seen for both sarcomeric proteins. At metaphase the localization pattern of alpha-actinin is already diffuse (arrow), while double bands are still visible for MyBP-C (arrowheads), which only redistributes by the anaphase and telophase stage. Bar represents 10 µm. 51 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Mitotic stage Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokinesis Mitotic stage Metaphase Mitotic stage Metaphase State of myofibril assembly +++ ++ + - State of myofibril assembly +++ ++ + +++ ++ + +++ ++ + +++ ++ + +++ ++ + - alpha-actinin myomesin 100% (30/30) 0% (0/30) 0% (0/30) 0% (0/30) 0% (0/65) 0% (0/65) 8% (5/65) 92% (60/65) 0% (0/28) 0% (0/28) 0% (0/28) 100% (28/28) 0% (0/32) 0% (0/32) 9.37% (3/32) 90.62% (29/32) 0% (0/20) 45% (9/20) 55% (11/20) 0% (0/20) 100% (25/25) 0% (0/25) 0% (0/25) 0% (0/25) 60% (18/30) 40% (12/30) 0% (0/30) 0% (0/30) 0% (0/20) 0% (0/20) 10% (2/20) 90% (18/20) 0% (0/28) 0% (0/28) 0% (0/28) 100% (28/28) 0% (0/20) 100% (20/20) 0% (0/20) 0% (0/20) cardiac alphaactin 0% 0% 10% 90% (0/30) (0/30) (3/30) (27/30) State of myofibril assembly titin T12 (Z-disc) +++ ++ + - 0% (0/26) 0% (0/26) 34.6% (9/26) 65.3%(17/26) M-band Z-disc cardiac troponin I sarc MyHC MyBP-C 0% (0/20) 0% (0/20) 15% (3/20) 85% (17/20) 25% (6/24) 62.5%(15/24) 12.5% (3/24) 0% (0/24) 53% (24/45) 47% (21/45) 0% (0/45) 0% (0/45) titin 9D10 (I-band) titin K58 (A-band) titin T51 (M-band) 0% 0% 40% 60% (0/20) (0/20) (8/20) (12/20) 45% 55% 0% 0% (9/20) (11/20) (0/20) (0/20) 80% (20/25) 20% (5/25) 0% (0/25) 0% (0/25) +++ intact myofibrils, ++ some disorganization, + partial disassembly, - complete disassembly Table: 2.1 Quantification of the state of myofibril assembly in cardiomyocytes during mitosis based on number of observed cases over total number of cells analyzed. 52 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Figure 2.5: Single confocal sections of whole mount preparations of embryonic mouse hearts labelled with antibodies against different sarcomeric proteins (B, E, H, K; red in overlay A, D, G, J) and against phosphorylated histone H3 together with antibodies against beta-catenin to delineate the cell-cell contacts (C, F, I, L; green in overlay). Also in dividing cardiomyocytes in the heart in situ, alpha-actinin (A, B) and titin T12 (D, E), which are Z-disc associated proteins/epitopes, are diffuse at a time when the localization pattern of myomesin (G, H) remains still quite intact (arrowheads delineate the cell borders, small arrows point at intact myofibrils in neighboring cardiomyocytes (D, E; J, K) or in dividing cells (G, H). The staining for titin T51 (J, K), which is an M-band associated titin epitope, becomes diffuse only by anaphase, similar to myomesin (data not shown). Continuous staining for beta-catenin along the plasma membrane also in dividing cardiomyocytes indicates that cardiomyocytes retain their contacts to the neighboring cells during division. Bar represents 10 µm. 53 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes the M-band protein component myomesin still shows a partially cross-striated localization pattern (Figure 2.5 H, small arrows). Only in late anaphase cardiomyocytes also M-band epitopes like titin T51, myomesin and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain start to appear in a diffuse localization as well (Figure 2.5 K, data not shown). Therefore myofibril disassembly happens also during cytokinesis in the developing heart in situ and shows a similar biphasic dynamics as in cultured cardiomyocytes. In addition, dividing cardiomyocytes in situ stay tightly connected to their presumably contracting neighboring cells and there is only little change in the overall cellular shape. The staining for the adherens junction protein beta-catenin remains continuous in dividing cells, similar to the localization pattern seen in the surrounding non-dividing cardiomyocytes. At this stage of development, the segregation of intercalated disc proteins to the sites of terminal myofibril insertion has not yet been achieved and adherens junctions as well as other types of cell-cell contacts are still distributed all around the plasma membrane (Perriard et al., 2003). 2.2.4 How is myofibril disassembly regulated? To assess whether the myofibrils in dividing cardiomyocytes are merely disassembled and reassembled afterwards or whether protein degradation plays a role as well in this process we stained cultured cardiomyocytes with antibodies against ubiquitin (Figure 2.6 B, E, H) in combination with alpha-actinin to delineate the myofibrils (Figure 2.6 A, D, G) and with tubulin to assess the stage of cell division (Figure 2.6 C, F, I). Ubiquitination is the first step in non-lysosomal protein degradation (Hershko and Ciechanover, 1992) and we do indeed find an upregulation of ubiquitin expression in dividing cardiomyocytes. While in interphase cardiomyocytes the signal for the ubiquitin antibody is rather weak and mainly associated with the nuclei as reported previously (Hilenski et al., 1992); Figure 2.6 B, cells in top left corner of E); once cardiomyocytes enter mitosis, ubiquitin starts to be spread throughout the cytoplasm (Figure 2.6 B, arrow). The ubiquitin fluorescence increases throughout telophase and remains high during cytokinesis, suggesting that ubiquitination of proteins takes place also in dividing cardiomyocytes (Figure 2.6 E, H). Due to the low frequency of cell division in our cultures as well as in the developing heart in situ, we were unable to analyse by biochemical means, whether myofibrillar proteins themselves are ubiquitinated. However, the high intensity of the ubiquitin signal could mean that protein degradation also of components 54 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes of the sarcomere or of proteins, which control sarcomere integrity, might happen during cell division. Figure 2.6: Expression of ubiquitin is upregulated in dividing cardiomyocytes. Cultured cardiomyocytes were stained with antibodies to sarcomeric alpha-actinin (A, D, G) together with antibodies against ubiquitin (B, E, H) and against tubulin (C, F, I) to identify the stage of cell division. Single confocal section reveal that while interphase cardiomyocytes display only little signal for ubiquitin (panel B); a drastic increase in the signal for ubiquitin can be detected in cardiomyocytes in metaphase (panel E) as well as in cytokinesis (panel H). There is no clear-cut colocalization between alpha-actinin and ubiquitin. Bar represents 10 µm. 55 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes Further evidence for the role of ubiquitin-mediated degradation for myofibril disassembly comes from experiments, where inhibitors that interfere with the proteasome pathway were used on dividing cardiomyocytes. Treatment with MG132 leads to metaphase cells that still display cross-striations in the alpha-actinin staining, while control cells show a completely diffuse localization of this protein (Figure 2.7). We conclude that the myofibrils have to be disassembled to achieve successful cell division in cardiomyocytes and that this disassembly process is probably regulated by factors, which are part of ubiquitination pathways. Figure 2.7: Disassembly of myofibrils is delayed in cardiomyocytes that were treated with MG132 to inhibit proteasome degradation. Single confocal sections of cardiomyocytes stained with monoclonal antibodies to sarcomeric alpha-actinin (B, D; red in A, C) and for tubulin (blue in A, C) as well as for phosphorylated histone (green in A, C) to identify the stage of mitosis. While in control cells at metaphase all the alpha-actinin is localized in a diffuse fashion throughout the entire cell (A, B), cross-striated myofibrils can still be seen in MG132 treated cardiomyocytes (C, D). Bar represents 10 µm. 56 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes 2.3 DISCUSSION By comparing the distribution of different components of the sarcomere in triple-stained dividing cardiomyocytes in culture and in the developing heart at different stages of mitosis we were able to find out that myofibril disassembly occurs prior to cytokinesis in at least two steps. Disassembly of individual components of the myofibrillar apparatus like sarcomeric alpha-actinin or sarcomeric myosin heavy chain in cultured cardiomyocytes was described previously by others (Conrad et al., 1991; Li et al., 1996; Li et al., 1997b; Du et al., 2003); however, so far no comparative analysis was performed. Our novel finding is that disassembly of the myofibrils shows a biphasic dynamics. Proteins or epitopes of proteins that are associated with the Z-disc or the thin filaments display a diffuse localization pattern at a time when the thick filaments are still comparatively intact as indicated by a cross-striated pattern for proteins like myosin heavy chain, MyBP-C or myomesin. A schematic representation of myofibril disassembly during cell division at the level of the individual sarcomere is depicted in Figure 2.8. Figure 2.8: Schematic representation of sarcomere disassembly during cell division. Thick (myosin and associated proteins) filaments are represented in dark blue, thin (actin and associated proteins) filaments in yellow and titin filaments in red. The Z-disc is shown in green, the M-band in purple. In metaphase, Z-disc associated proteins are already disassembled (indicated by font in italics), while the thick filaments and the Mband still remain intact, only to be disassembled in late anaphase. 57 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes This process is exactly reversed to the time-course of myofibril assembly, where the first organized complexes consist of alpha-actinin, actin and Z-disc epitopes of titin at a time when all the thick filament components are still completely diffuse throughout the sarcomere (Ehler et al., 1999). On the other hand, myofibril disassembly as it occurs during myopathies or muscle wasting is also characterized by degradation of Z-disc and I-band material before the rest of the sarcomere is affected (Taylor et al., 1995). During this process, degradation of myofibrils seems to be mainly regulated by the activity of muscle-specific calpain, which can associate with the I-band region of titin (Kinbara et al., 1998) and thereafter by the ubiquitinproteasome pathway (Hasselgren and Fischer, 2001). A possible explanation for the prolonged existence of intact thick filaments comes from their structure and way of assembly. Myosin molecules are characterized by the ability to associate to bipolar filaments on their own in the test tube (Margossian et al., 1987). In addition, the putative M-band cross-linking molecule, myomesin, which seems to be important to provide a link between titin and myosin, binds so strongly to titin, that it can even be detected on isolated titin molecules (Fürst et al., 1989). It appears that once the myosin molecules have been integrated by myomesin, they represent a rather stable structure. Also during myofibrillogenesis in cultured cardiomyocytes so-called floating A-bands have been observed, which were then integrated into nascent myofibrils (Schultheiss et al., 1990); suggesting first, that the assembly of thick and thin filaments is an independent process and that also their disassembly might be regulated autonomously. How can M-bands still stay in register at a time when Z-disc epitopes of titin are already localized in a completely diffuse fashion? It has been thought that titin provides a basic cytoskeletal framework together with alpha-actinin and myomesin for myofibril assembly (Ehler et al., 1999). While this seems indeed to be the case for myofibrillogenesis, as indicated by the absence of properly formed myofibrils in cells that lack titin or express only truncated forms of it (van der Ven et al., 2000; Xu et al., 2002), there must be another means to hold the M-bands at least temporarily in place in dividing cardiomyocytes. One possibility is the intermediate filament network, consisting of desmin in cardiomyocytes. However, desmin filaments are mainly concentrated around the Z-disc and evidence for their continuation along the myofibrils to the M-band is still conflicting (Small et al., 1992). In addition, the cross-striated pattern that desmin filaments show in cardiomyocytes in situ gets completely lost in cultured cardiomyocytes during the first days and reorganization only takes place after prolonged culture periods (Ehler and Perriard, 2000). Another possibility for registering is a link from the myofibrils to the plasma membrane. The costameres, the major 58 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes integrating complex between the myofibrils and the membrane do show a cross-striated pattern in situ as well as in cultured cells, however, they are situated at the Z-disc region (Pardo et al., 1983). It is still not quite clear whether and how myofibrils are connected to the lateral membrane at the M-band level. Previously it was thought that skelemin would serve as a linker between M-bands and the membrane (Price, 1987) but since skelemin has been identified as a splice variant of the integral M-band protein myomesin and it could be shown that embryonic M-bands consist exclusively of this isoform, this possibility is highly unlikely (Steiner et al., 1999; Agarkova et al., 2000). Another candidate for the linkage of M-bands to the membrane is spectrin, based on its localization pattern (Williams and Bloch, 1999; Flick and Konieczny, 2000). Recent evidence has suggested an interaction between ankyrin, a binding partner of spectrin in erythrocytes and the giant M-band protein obscurin (Bagnato et al., 2003). It remains to be determined whether this multiprotein complex is indeed the filamentous material that provides a link between the M-band and the plasma membrane, as proposed by electron microscopy results (Pierobon-Bormioli et al., 1981; Nakamura et al., 1983). In contrast to most cell lines, dividing cardiomyocytes in vitro and even more so in situ do not round up completely during mitosis and stay in relatively close association with their neighboring cells and the extracellular matrix. This was especially apparent when we studied dividing cells in whole mount preparations of embryonic hearts, where the cell-cell contact sites stayed absolutely intact in cells that were positive for phosphorylated histone H3. This is in good agreement with pioneering ultrastructural studies on dividing cardiomyocytes, where it could also be shown that no loosening of cell-cell contacts occurs (Manasek, 1968). The fact that the contractile work of the cardiac tissue has to go on while individual cardiomyocytes divide, probably does not allow to interfere too much with the integrity of the tissue. Currently it is not quite clear whether the myofibrils are only disassembled and the sarcomeric proteins are recycled again after cytokinesis or whether protein degradation of myofibrillar components takes place as well. The drastic upregulation of ubiquitin expression in dividing cardiomyocytes suggests that protein degradation is important; however, possibly this is mainly the case for proteins that are immediately involved in cell cycle regulation like the cyclins and the cdks (Peters, 2002). On the other hand, the increased expression levels of ubiquitin could also indicate a proteasome-independent function, as described recently (see review by (Schnell and Hicke, 2003). However, the results from the MG132 experiment point towards a role of protein degradation in regulating myofibril disassembly, although not 59 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes necessarily degradation of sarcomeric proteins. The fact that although no longer assembled into clear cross-striations, structural components like alpha-actinin, myomesin and titin can still be stained by antibodies and show a subcellular localization that is distinct from the signal for ubiquitin rather argues for a recycling of these sarcomeric components. Similar recycling processes seem to occur when adult rod-shaped cardiomyocytes adapt to culture conditions. While they flatten and attach to the culture dish in the presence of serum, their myofibrillar material is aggregated to a clump; once the cells have spread, myofibrils are reassembled and beating activity is resumed (Messerli et al., 1993). In addition, it has been shown that myofibril assembly in cultured myocytes was not blocked by addition of cycloheximide, suggesting that protein synthesis is not essential (Rumyantsev, 1977). At present the factors that regulate myofibril disassembly during mitosis have not been identified yet. The existence of a putative Z-disc degradation factor was already postulated thirty years ago (Rumyantsev, 1977), however, its molecular nature is still unclear. Numerous proteins that are either integral components or transiently associated with the Z-disc have been identified in the recent years (Faulkner et al., 2001), but for none of them a direct involvement in the organization of cardiomyocyte proliferation was shown so far. Also at the M-band numerous proteins that are potentially involved in signalling pathways have been shown in addition to bona fide structural sarcomeric proteins. Among these are e.g. the MURFs, muscle-specific ring finger proteins that are associated with the ubiquitin pathway (Bodine et al., 2001; McElhinny et al., 2002; Pizon et al., 2002) and have been shown to be involved in the regulation of muscle atrophy. Obscurin, is a giant M-band protein that possesses several domains that have been associated with different signalling pathways and also contains a Rho guanine exchange factor domain, suggesting that it could be involved in the activation of the small GTPase Rho (Young et al., 2001). Activation of the Rho signalling pathway seems to be important for cardiomyocyte proliferation during development, as demonstrated by the embryonic lethality of the conditional expression of the Rho inhibitor GDIα in the heart (Wei et al., 2002). In conclusion, these proteins might represent a sensory machine that is associated with the sarcomere under normal conditions but which might adopt a second function as signalling molecules under conditions of additional work load, stress and myofibril disassembly during cytokinesis or in disease. Unfortunately, the low rate of division in culture as well as in situ does not permit a thorough biochemical analysis of the identity of the ubiquitinated proteins at present; however based on results published on proteins for other cell types an ubiquitination of e.g. the MURFs is rather likely to occur. Preliminary experiments in our lab have shown that the signals for MURF-2 and for ubiquitin show a 60 Chapter 2 Myofibril disassembly in dividing cardiomyocytes similar subcellular localization in dividing cultured cardiomyocytes (Ahuja, Ehler, Gautel and Perriard, unpublished observations). It is astonishing that the cells should break down such an elaborate structure as the myofibrils to undergo mitosis and it will be exciting to find out about the signalling pathways that lead to this disassembly and possibly degradation process. The observation that the myofibrils have to be disassembled for cytokinesis to occur might provide also a simple mechanistic explanation, why cardiomyocytes cease to divide after birth. With the hypertrophic growth that is caused by the increased workload on the heart after birth, this disassembly - reassembly process might be simply too costly from an energetic point of view. In addition, too many cytoskeletal elements in the form of myofibrils might physically impede cell division as well. This together with the alterations in the expression levels of proteins that regulate the cell cycle and cytokinesis, respectively might contribute to the uncoupling of karyokinetic and cytokinetic events as seen in postnatal rodent cardiomyocytes (Li et al., 1996; Georgescu et al., 1997; Poolman and Brooks, 1998). 61 CHAPTER 3 Probing the role of septins in cardiomyocytes Preeti Ahuja1, Evelyne Perriard1, William Trimble2, Jean-Claude Perriard1 and Elisabeth Ehler3,4 1 2 3 Institute of Cell Biology, ETH Zurich-Honggerberg, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5G1X8, Canada The Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King’s College London, London SE1 1UL, UK 4 The Cardiovascular Division, King’s College London Accepted in Experimental Cell Research (2006) 62 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.1 SUMMARY Heart growth in the embryo is achieved by division of differentiated cardiomyocytes. Around birth cardiomyocytes stop dividing and heart growth occurs only by volume increase of the individual cells. Cardiomyocytes seem to lose their capacity for cytokinesis at this developmental stage. Septins are GTP-binding proteins that have been shown to be involved in cytokinesis from yeast to vertebrates. We wanted to determine whether septin expression patterns can be correlated to the cessation of cytokinesis during heart development. We found high expression of only SEPT2, SEPT6, SEPT7 and SEPT9 in heart, in a developmentally regulated fashion, with high levels in the embryonic heart, downregulation around birth and no detectable expression in the adult. In dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes all septins localize to the cleavage furrow. We used drugs to probe for the functional interactions of SEPT2 in dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes. Differences in the effects on subcellular septin localization in cardiomyocytes were observed, depending whether a Rho kinase (ROCK) inhibitor was used or whether actin and myosin were targeted directly. Our data show a tight correlation of high levels of septin expression and the ability to undergo cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes. In addition, we were able to dissect the different contributions of ROCK signaling and the acto-myosin cytoskeleton to septin localization to the contractile ring using cardiomyocytes as an experimental system. 63 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.2 RESULTS 3.2.1 Expression of septins in heart during development In order to determine which septins are expressed in mouse heart and whether there is any differential regulation during development we performed immunoblotting with antisera raised against different septins. The expression of ten different septins was investigated:SEPT1 (Diff6), SEPT2 (Nedd5), SEPT3 (G septin), SEPT4 (Bh5), SEPT5 (CDCrel-1), SEPT6 (KIAA0128), SEPT7 (Cdc10), SEPT8 (KIAA0202), SEPT9 (MSF) and SEPT11 (FLJ10849). The sequences chosen for each peptide, as indicated in the methods, were isoform-specific and did not significantly overlap with any other proteins in the GenBank database. Only four septins, SEPT2, SEPT6, SEPT7 and SEPT9 showed considerable expression levels in heart tissue (Figure 3.1, lanes 2-5), while the other septin antibodies only gave a signal in the positive control brain tissue (Figure 3.1, lane 1). It should be noted that many septin genes undergo alternative splicing, only some of which has been characterized, and it remains possible that the peptide-specific antisera could fail to detect all of the protein products from each gene. However, of the isoforms detected by the antibodies, SEPT2 and SEPT6 are expressed at higher levels in the samples from embryonic heart (Figure 3.1, lane 3), get downregulated by the first postnatal week and are absent in adult heart (Figure 3.1, lane 2). Equal loading of cardiac tissue at different developmental stages is demonstrated by comparable intensities for cardiac actin expression. In the case of SEPT7, two isoforms are detected with the larger form being less abundant in brain and more abundant in heart. Again, both isoforms appear to be downregulated as development proceeds. In contrast, SEPT9 levels appear to rise during these initial developmental stages before declining to low levels in the adult heart. This suggests that cardiomyocytes express only a subset of septins at detectable levels. In addition, septins are only highly expressed in cardiomyocytes that are still able to divide and do not seem to play a major role in the adult heart. 64 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Figure 3.1: Expression of different septin family members in the heart during development. The expression of SEPT1 to 9 and SEPT11 was analysed by immunoblotting of cell lysates from embryonic (E14) heart (lane 3), day of birth (P0; lane 4), day eight (P8; lane 5), and adult ventricular muscle (lane 2). Only four septins, SEPT2 (Nedd5), SEPT6 (KIAA0128), SEPT7 (Cdc10) and SEPT9 (MSF) were detected in heart, while all antibodies showed a signal in the control sample of brain tissue (lane 1). They were expressed in a developmental-stage specific fashion. The expression is high in samples from embryonic heart, starts to get down regulated after birth and is completely absent or marginally present in the adult heart (lane 2). Equal loading of heart samples is demonstrated by immunostaining for cardiac actin. 65 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.2.2 Localization pattern of the different septins in cultured embryonic rat cardiomyocytes during cytokinesis To find out where the septins are localized in the cell, we determined the subcellular distribution of SEPT2, SEPT6 and SEPT9 in cultured rat embryonic cardiomyocytes by triple immunofluorescence (Figure 3.2a). We were unable to investigate the subcellular location of SEPT7, since none of the several antibodies that we tested worked for immunofluorescence. Cardiomyocytes undergoing cytokinesis were identified by staining with an antibody specific for tubulin, which finally amasses in the midzone region before the cells pinch off each other (Figure 3.2(a) J, K, L; blue signal in A, B, C). Sarcomeric alpha-actinin, which is a component of the sarcomeric Z-disc, served as a myofibrillar marker (Figure 3.2(a) D, E, F; red in A, B, C) and is localized in a cross striated pattern in interphase and prophase cardiomyocytes. In metaphase, anaphase and telophase however, the localization of alphaactinin becomes completely diffuse and only in late telophase the cross-striated localization pattern begins to re-establish (Ahuja et al., 2004). SEPT2, SEPT6 and SEPT9 could only be detected during late telophase of cardiomyocytes and showed midbody localization (Figure 3.2(a) G, H, I, green in A, B, C; indicated by arrows). SEPT2 and SEPT6 are expressed at higher levels than SEPT9 and also display localization throughout the entire midbody region, while SEPT9 seems to be confined to the edges. In addition to the signal at the cleavage furrow, SEPT2 showed a cytoplasmic signal that was at times associated with the actin filaments (compare with the localization of alpha-actinin). Expression of septins during late telophase and their localization at the midbody during this time, suggests that they are involved in cytokinesis of dividing cardiomyocytes, similar to observations made in yeast and other mammalian cell types (Kinoshita et al., 1997; Surka et al., 2002). The sequential condensation of the septin signal during cleavage furrow formation is demonstrated in Figure 3.2(b), which shows the distribution of SEPT2 at late anaphase, telophase and cytokinesis in dividing cardiomyocytes. 66 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Figure 3.2(a): Localization pattern of the three different septins in cultured embryonic rat (E14) cardiomyocytes (ERC) during cytokinesis. Confocal micrographs of ERC stained for the individual septin (panels G, H, I, green in overlay), for the myofibrillar protein sarcomeric alpha-actinin (panels D, E, F, red in overlay) and for tubulin to assess the stage of mitosis (panels J, K, L, blue in overlay). While SEPT2 and SEPT6 show midbody localization and some actin association in the case of SEPT2, SEPT9 shows in addition colocalization with the microtubules. Bar represents 10 µm. 67 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Figure 3.2(b): Distribution of SEPT2 at different stages of cell division in cardiomyocytes. Confocal micrographs of cultured ERCs stained for SEPT2 (panel G, H, I; green in overlay), sarcomeric alpha-actinin (D, E, F; red in overlay) and tubulin (panel J, K, L; blue in overlay) show the gradual condensation of the SEPT2 signal to the constricting cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. Bar represents 10 µm. 68 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.2.3 Effect of a cytokinetic inhibitor on septin localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes To identify the specific role of septins in cardiomyocytes, we next investigated the effect of a cytokinetic inhibitor on septin localization in dividing cardiomyocytes. Cultured rat embryonic cardiomyocytes were treated with the ROCK Kinase inhibitor, Y-27632 (Figure 3.3), which is known to inhibit cytokinesis by preventing the formation of the cleavage furrow (Ishizaki et al., 2000; Kosako et al., 2000). In untreated cells, SEPT2, (Figure 3.3 C, single arrow) and SEPT6, (Figure 3.3 K, single arrow) were mainly localized at the cleavage furrow, while in cells treated with Y-27632, SEPT2, (Figure 3.3 G, double arrow) and SEPT6, (Figure 3.3 O, double arrow), got redistributed. Interestingly, we saw a differential effect on the distribution of these two septins. While SEPT2 relocalizes to areas in the periphery of the cell, SEPT6 gets associated with the spindle in Y-27632 treated cardiomyocytes. SEPT2 and SEPT6 have been suggested to interact closely in other cell types and to our knowledge this is the first time that a distinct effect can be seen on the distribution of these two septins in a cell type (Macara et al., 2002). The apparent elevation of septin expression levels during the phase of cytokinesis seems to be independent of ROCK signaling for both SEPT2 and SEPT6. However, their assembly in the future midbody region of dividing cardiomyocytes does require active ROCK and cleavage furrow formation. 3.2.4 Effect of Cytochalasin D on SEPT2 localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes In interphase and postmitotic cells, SEPT2 is known to co-localize with actin stress fibers (Kinoshita et al., 1997). It has been suggested that intact actin fibers are necessary for the maintenance of SEPT2-containing fibers (Kinoshita et al., 1997). In order to find out whether septin distribution is also affected in cardiomyocytes upon actin depolymerization, we incubated the cells with an inhibitor of actin polymerization, Cytochalasin D (Figure 3.4). In untreated cells, SEPT2, (Figure 3.4 E, single arrow) mainly localizes at the midbody of the dividing cell while in the cells treated with Cytochalasin D, SEPT2, (Figure 3.4 F, double arrows) appears to be disrupted and accumulates in puncta and small circles near the membrane. These SEPT2 aggregates and rings in treated cells are reminiscent of septin localization in Cytochalasin D treated fibroblasts (Kinoshita et al., 2002). No truly separated cells could be observed in cytochalasin-treated cultures, despite the fact that furrow ingression looks initially normal. The actin in the myofibrils of the cardiomyocytes remains unaffected 69 Chapter 3 Septins in heart by Cytochalasin D treatment, as shown previously for mature myofibrils (Rothen-Rutishauser et al., 1998). These results suggest that in cardiomyocytes a distinct population of actin fibers, which is affected by Cytochalasin D, is necessary for the redistribution of septins to the midbody region and thus cytokinesis. Figure 3.3: Prevention of cytokinesis affects septin localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes. Immunofluorescence analysis by confocal microscopy of control ERC (panels A-D; I-L) and ERC treated with Y-27632, an inhibitor of cytokinesis (panels E-H; M-P), stained for the individual septins, SEPT2, (panels C, G, green in overlay A, E) and SEPT6, (panels K, O, green in overlay I, M) respectively. Sarcomeric alpha-actinin was stained as a myofibrillar marker (panels B, F, J, N, red in overlay) and tubulin to assess the stage of mitosis (panels D, H, L, P, blue in overlay). Localization of SEPT2 was mainly found at the cell periphery (panel G, indicated by double arrow) after the treatment with the cytokinetic inhibitor Y-27632 at the concentration of 100 µM for 4 hours, while SEPT6 got associated with the microtubular spindle (panel O; double arrows). In control cells for both the septins (panel C, K indicated by single arrow) mainly contractile ring localization could be found. Bar represents 10 µm. 70 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Figure 3.4: Inhibition of actin polymerization affects SEPT2 localization in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes. Immunofluorescence analysis by confocal microscopy of control ERC (panels A, C, E, G) and ERC treated with Cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization (panels B, D, F, H), stained for SEPT2, (panels E, F, green in overlay). Cardiac actin was stained (panels C, D, red in overlay) as a myofibrillar marker and tubulin to assess the stage of mitosis (panels G, H, blue in overlay). SEPT2 in control cells was mainly found at the midbody of the dividing cells (single arrow in E). After the treatment with Cytochalasin D at the concentration of 100µg/ml for 1hour, SEPT2 localization appears to be disrupted and it accumulates in dots and circles (double arrow in F; circles pointed out by arrowheads). Bar represents 10 µm. 71 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.2.5 Interference with different parts of the cytoskeleton has distinct effects on SEPT2 and non muscle myosin IIB distribution in embryonic rat cardiomyocytes The localization pattern that SEPT2 adopted following treatment with Y-27632 is very reminiscent of the distribution of non muscle (nm) myosin IIB in cultured cardiomyocytes, namely in peripheral areas of the cell. Since nm myosin IIB is also involved in the contractile ring we wanted to analyze its distribution in cultured cardiomyocytes following drug treatment and compare it with the one of SEPT2 (Figure 3.5). Determination of the stage of mitosis was performed by DAPI staining of the chromosomes (data not shown). In control cardiomyocytes that are dividing nm myosin IIB can be detected at the cleavage furrow (indicated by an asterisk in all overlay panels), where it colocalizes with SEPT2. Nm myosin IIB is excluded from areas that contain myofibrils, but there is an additional signal in the periphery, where the cells spread (Figure 3.5 A-D; arrowheads in C). Inhibition of ROCK signaling with Y-27632 leads to a redistribution of SEPT2 to the same peripheral areas, while the organization of nm myosin IIB is similar to control cells (Figure 3.5 E-H). Upon Cytochalasin D treatment SEPT2 accumulates to aggregates and rings, where it colocalises with nm myosin IIB (Figure 3.5 I-L). Interestingly, inhibition of myosin ATPase activity by incubation with Blebbistatin results in a segregation of the SEPT2 and the nm myosin IIB signal. While the former is now found preferentially associated with the plasma membrane (arrowheads in 5N), nm myosin IIB localization seems to be little affected (Figure 3.5 M-P). Long-term incubation (>2h) of the cardiomyocytes with Blebbistatin leads to a shrunken phenotype with many blebbings at the periphery, indicating that this cell type is extremely sensitive to this drug. Taken together these results suggest that 1) SEPT2 has a tendency to cosegregate with nm myosin IIB but only if the activity of the myosin ATPase is maintained, 2) interaction with additional proteins that are subjects to ROCK regulation keep SEPT2 in the cleavage furrow and prevent it from associating with nm myosin IIB in the cellular periphery and 3) interference with the actin cytoskeleton leads to disruption of the distribution of nm myosin IIB and its relocation in aggregates together with SEPT2 (see also discussion and Figure 3.6). 72 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Figure 3.5: Comparative analysis of the localization of SEPT2 and nm myosin IIB after treatment with differentdrugs. Confocal micrographs of cultured ERC treated with Y-27632 (1mM) for 4h (panels E-H), Cytochalasin D (100 µg/ml) for 1h (panels I-L) or Blebbistatin (100µM) for 2h (panels M-P) just before fixation or control cells (A-D). Cells were triple-stained for SEPT2 (B, F, J, N; red in overlay), nm myosin IIB (C, G, K, O; green in overlay) and sarcomeric alpha-actinin to identify cardiomyocytes (D, H, L, P). Determination of the stage of mitosis was performed by DAPI staining (not shown). In control cells SEPT2 is restricted to the cleavage furrow, but redistributes to the cellular periphery after treatment with Y-27632. There it colocalizes with nm myosin IIB, which is generally present in the peripheral areas of cell spreading and attachment (arrowheads in C). Depolymerization of the actin filaments leads to SEPT2 being localized in small aggregates throughout the cytoplasm, while interference with myosin activity results in SEPT2 association with the plasma membrane (arrowheads in N). With the exception of the latter case, SEPT2 is usually found in close association with nm myosin IIB. Dividing cells are indicated by two arrows in the overlay, the region of the cleavage furrow is indicated by an asterisk. Bar represents 10 µm. 73 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 3.3 DISCUSSION Analysis of septin expression in the heart during development revealed that from the 12 mammalian septin genes that were characterized so far (Martinez and Ware, 2004) only a subset of four, namely SEPT2, SEPT6, SEPT7 and SEPT9 are expressed at the protein level and that they display highest expression at developmental stages when cardiomyocytes still possess the ability to undergo cytokinesis. Unfortunately, many septin genes undergo alternative splicing and we cannot rule out the possibility that splice variants of some of the septins may not be recognized by our antibodies. However, they do recognize abundant forms in many tissues and all recognize a band in the brain. Consistent with this different expression levels of distinct septins have been described in other tissues, for example while SEPT2 seems to be fairly ubiquitously expressed, SEPT4 is mainly found in spleen, brain, kidney lung and testis (Xie et al., 1999), tissue types which also show high expression levels of SEPT9 in addition to its expression in heart (Surka et al., 2002). Expression profiling by electronic northern blots of the entire septin gene family also revealed ubiquitous expression of some septins and tissue specific expression of others, mainly in lymphoid or brain tissues (Hall et al., 2005). Recently another septin, SEPT13, has been identified that shows expression in heart at least at the mRNA level (Hall et al., 2005); due to the lack of antibody we were not able to characterize this septin in cardiomyocytes. The four septins that we identified in heart are representatives of four evolutionary distinct classes of septins (Kinoshita, 2003), suggesting that cardiomyocytes may only express the minimal required set of septins to form a complex (Versele and Thorner, 2005). In addition, cardiomyocytes show a developmental stage specific expression of septins with high levels being only expressed at stages when cytokinesis still occurs (i.e. embryonic and perinatal). Septins have been suggested to play a role for vesicle trafficking, cytoskeletal remodeling and apoptosis, but do not seem to be required at high amounts in adult cardiomyocytes. We suggest that at embryonic stages similar levels of septin expression occur in dividing and interphase cardiomyocytes. Our explanation for the lack of signal that we observe in surrounding interphase cells is that the signal intensity in the cleavage furrow is too high to allow for visualization of diffuse septins in the neighbouring cells without saturation. Drugs that lead to septin aggregation either in the cytoplasm like Cytochalasin D or at the plasma membrane like Blebbistatin do reveal the presence of septin expression also in interphase cells. 74 Chapter 3 Septins in heart Upon treatment with Y-27632 we observed a differential effect on the localization of SEPT2 compared to SEPT6. While SEPT2 cosegregated with nm myosin IIB to the periphery of the cell, SEPT6 started to show association with the spindle. Mitotic spindle association of septin family members that are known to target to the actin cytoskeleton has been observed under other experimental conditions as well (Spiliotis et al., 2005) and its significance remains to be determined. The minimal set of septins that is expressed in cardiomyocytes comprises all the components that are required for septin complex formation (Versele and Thorner, 2005). At the moment it is not quite clear whether these kind of complexes are necessarily formed at all times in the cellular environment. For example SEPT2 and SEPT9 associate with distinct cytoskeletal filament systems, the actin filaments and the microtubuli, respectively (Kinoshita et al., 1997; Surka et al., 2002). In addition, differential upregulation of distinct septins has been shown in disease (Hall et al., 2005). Further indications for the existence of a crosstalk between the expression of different septin isoforms but not necessarily in the stoichiometric amounts to form complexes come from the analysis of the SEPT5 knockout mouse, which shows a concomitant upregulation of SEPT2 and a downregulation of SEPT7 (Peng et al., 2002). The most important observations that we have made in our studies concern the distinct behavior of SEPT2 following the application of drugs that are known to interfere with different aspects of cytokinesis. Inhibition of Rho signaling resulted in SEPT2 redistributing to the cellular periphery to colocalize with non-sarcomeric nm myosin, interference with actin filaments other than the myofibrils resulted in aggregates of SEPT2 and nm myosin throughout the cell, while blocking of myosin ATPase activity lead to dissociation of the septin and nm myosin signals and to an aggregation of SEPT2 at the plasma membrane (see Figure 3.6). The membrane association of septins is probably mediated by a conserved polybasic region that can bind phosphatidylinositol 4,5 biphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P2) (Zhang et al., 1999). Some of the effects that we observe are probably due to side effects of the drugs that were employed. For example Y-27632 inhibits ROCK, but also downstream phosphorylation of MLC, which in turn is required for nm myosin IIB assembly at the contractile ring; in addition the concentrations that we used will also inhibit citron kinase, another player in the establishment of the contractile ring. Blebbistatin is claimed to be one of the most specific inhibitors of myosin ATPase and only works on non muscle and skeletal muscle myosins but not on smooth muscle myosins or other members of the myosin family (Straight et al., 2003). This specificity was explained on a structural basis recently by the identification of the Blebbistatin contact residues in the myosin molecule (Allingham et al., 75 Chapter 3 Septins in heart 2005). While there are similarities between the three-dimensional structure of the active sites of myosin and P-loop proteins such as the septins (Smith and Rayment, 1996), no threedimensional structure of a septin is available at the moment and it is therefore not quite clear whether Blebbistatin might also have a side effect on septins, which might result in this membrane association of SEPT2. Our high resolution confocal microscopy studies allowed us also to delineate subtle differences between septin and nm myosin localization at the cleavage furrow, with septin being localized always more centrally than nm myosin IIB (see Figure 3.6 inset) while actin, as deduced from the signal of alpha-actinin, is localized more distally. This distribution is even maintained in Y-27632 treated cultured cardiomyocytes, where again the residual septin and nm myosin IIB in the region of the prospective cleavage furrow are localized more centrally than actin. These observations support the hypothesis that one of the functions of septins is to act as a scaffold for the assembly of a contractile ring; presumably via the interaction with anillin (Straight et al., 2005). Figure 3.6: Model of the distribution of SEPT2, nm myosin IIB and actin in dividing ERCs under different culture conditions. The proposed location of the actin is based on staining for alpha-actinin. In control cardiomyocytes nm myosin heavy chain is localized at the areas of cell spreading in the periphery and in addition also at the cleavage furrow together with SEPT2 and actin. Careful analysis of the confocal images revealed that septin is always localized further towards the middle of the cleavage furrow than nm myosin IIB and actin. Incubation with Y-27632 leads to an inhibition of ROCK, its downstream target MLCK and at the concentration used also of citron kinase. Furrowing is reduced although some residual assembly of contractile ring proteins can still be seen; again septin and nm myosin IIB are localized more centrally than actin. The rest of the septin gets redistributed to the peripheral areas of the cells, where it colcalizes with nm myosin IIB. Cytochalasin D leads to a depolymerization of all actin filaments except the myofibrils. Furrowing is reduced 76 Chapter 3 Septins in heart and septin, nm myosin IIB and actin colocalize in aggregates throughout the cytoplasm. Blebbistatin inhibits the myosin ATPase activity and leads to a complete diffuse distribution of nm myosin IIB throughout the cytoplasm. While actin is still present in fibers that span the cytoplasm, septin relocalizes and shows strong association with the plasma membrane. In conclusion, our results on septin expression during heart development have provided a possible explanation why karyokinesis and cytokinesis become uncoupled in cardiomyocytes after birth, namely the reduced levels of septin expression. This reduction cannot be explained alone by hypertrophic growth and thus dilution of the septin signal in the protein samples by an excess of myofibrillar material, since dramatic increases in cardiomyocyte size and myofibril content are only seen later (Leu et al., 2001). In addition, the drug treatment experiments using a highly differentiated cell system with an elaborated cytoskeleton such as the cardiomyocyte have enabled us to have a closer look at the function of SEPT2 at the cellular level. 77 CHAPTER 4 Analysis of the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes during development and disease Preeti Ahuja1, Evelyne Perriard1, Thierry Pedrazzini2, Shinji Satoh3, Jean-Claude Perriard1 and Elisabeth Ehler4,5 1 2 3 Institute of Cell Biology, ETH Zurich-Honggerberg, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland Division of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine, University of Lausanne Medical School, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University, 4546 Tsurumihara, 874-0838, Beppu Japan 4 The Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King’s College London, London SE1 1UL, UK 5 The Cardiovascular Division, King’s College London To be submitted (2006) 78 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.1 SUMMARY The heart is the first functional organ in the embryo. In the early postnatal period the cardiomyocytes stop dividing and growth is mainly achieved by increase in cell volume. However, in some species cardiomyocytes can undergo an additional incomplete mitosis where karyokinesis takes place in the absence of cytokinesis leading to binucleation. There are several key players known that are important for cytokinesis such as small GTPases like RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42, septins along with their downstream effectors like ROCK I, ROCK II, Citron Kinase. We demonstrate here for the first time that cardiomyocytes show a developmental stage specific expression of all the proteins associated with the formation of the actomyosin ring with high levels being only expressed at stages when cytokinesis still occurs (i.e. embryonic and perinatal). This suggests that downregulation of expression of many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis may be responsible for uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes after birth. Also we found out that while stressed myocardium during pathological hypertrophy tries to adapt to the increased work load there is indeed an upregulation of karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins, despite the fact that the mitotic cycle is usually not resumed under these conditions. The failure to undergo complete division could be due to the presence of stable, highly ordered and functional sarcomeres in the adult myocardium or could be because of the absence of degradation mechanisms (ubiquitin or calcium dependent) which facilitate division of embryonic cardiomyocytes by disintegrating myofibrils. 79 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.2 RESULTS 4.2.1 Expression and localization of various actomyosin ring associated proteins in the heart during development To ascertain whether neonatal rodent cardiomyocytes stop dividing due to the lack of their entire cytokinesis machinery or by downregulation of an individual regulatory component, the expression pattern of different Rho GTPases and their downstream effectors were investigated at different stages of mouse heart development by immunoblotting with specific antibodies. We analyzed different cytokinetic markers; RhoA (panel A), Rac1 (panel B), Cdc42 (panel C), p-Cofilin (panel D), ROCK II (panel E), ROCK I (panel F) and a karyokinetic marker PCNA (panel G) in embryonic day 14 (lane 1), day of birth P0 (lane 2), P8 (lane 3) and adult mouse heart (lane 4) along with adult mouse kidney tissue lysate (lane 5) as a positive control for all the cytokinetic markers (Figure 4.1). In the embryonic heart (Figure 4.1, lane 1), high levels of expression of all the cytokinetic as well as karyokinetic markers could be found, which get downregulated by the first postnatal week and were almost absent in adult heart (Figure 4.1, lane 4). This suggests that the Rho GTPases and their modulators tested here are highly expressed in cardiomyocytes that are still able to divide and do not seem to play a major role in the adult heart. Subcellular distributions of the Rho GTPases RhoA, Cdc42 and Rac1 in cultured rat embryonic cardiomyocytes (E14) were determined by triple immunofluorescence (Figure 4.2). Cardiomyocytes undergoing cytokinesis were identified by staining with an antibody specific for tubulin (Figure 4.2 J, K, L; blue in overlay), which finally concentrates in the midzone region before the cells pinch off to form daughter cells (indicated by double arrows in the Figure 4.2 A, B, C). Myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C), which is a component of the sarcomeric A-band, served as a myofibrillar marker (Figure 4.2 D, E, F; red in overlay). MyBP-C is localized in a cross-striated pattern in interphase, prophase and metaphase cardiomyocytes, however, the localization of MyBP-C becomes completely diffuse during anaphase and only after cytokinesis the cross-striated localization pattern begins to reestablish (Ahuja et al., 2004). We found that only during late telophase of cardiomyocytes, RhoA, Cdc42 and Rac1 were expressed at high levels and restricted at the midbody region of dividing cardiomyocytes (Figure 4.2 G, H, I, indicated by arrow). 80 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Expression of Rho GTPases and their downstream effectors during late telophase and their localization at the midbody during embryonic stage implies that they are involved in cytokinesis of dividing cardiomyocytes, similar to what has been observed in most mammalian cells (Guertin et al., 2002). Thus, downregulation of many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis may be responsible for uncoupling cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes after birth. Figure 4.1: Expression pattern of different cytokinesis associated proteins during developmental stages of the heart. Cell lysates from embryonic heart (E14, lane 1), day of birth (P0, lane 2), day eight (P8, lane 3), adult mouse ventricular muscle (lane 4), and adult mouse kidney tissue lysate (positive control, lane 5) were analysed by immunoblotting for expression of several actomyosin associated proteins; RhoA (panel A), Rac1 (panel B), Cdc42 (panel C), p-Cofilin (panel D), ROCK II (panel E), ROCK I (panel F) and PCNA (panel G) as a karyokinetic protein. Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; α-cardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). All markers coupled with karyokinesis and cytokinesis are expressed high in samples from embryonic heart, start to get downregulated after birth and are completely or almost absent in the adult heart. Equal amounts of total proteins were loaded in each lane, but the intensity of the bands obtained for several antibodies does not reflect the relative amounts of these proteins compared to each other. 81 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.2: Localization of three different actomyosin ring associated proteins in cultured embryonic rat (E14) cardiomyocytes (ERC) during division. Confocal micrographs of ERC stained for RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42 (panels G, H, I respectively and green in overlay), for the myofibrillar protein Myosin Binding Protein-C (MyBP-C), (panels D, E, F and red in overlay) and for tubulin to assess the stage of mitosis (panels J, K, L and blue in overlay). Double arrows in panels A, B and C point to the cells undergoing cytokinesis. All the three GTPases indicated by arrows in panels (G, H and I) show strong midbody localization in embryonic cardiomyocytes undergoing cytokinesis. Bar represents 10 µm. 82 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.2.2 Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in heart during hypertrophy After having shown that karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins are downregulated after birth and are absent in adult heart, we now wanted to explore the possibility of cardiomyocytes making an attempt to undergo complete cell division during the diseased state of the heart. It is believed that cell cycle re-entry is an innate response to hypertrophy and that there is a partial progress through the cell cycle under these conditions, which signifies an important adaptive aspect of the myocardium to stress (Ferrans and Rodriguez, 1987; Li et al., 1998; Capasso et al., 1992). To test, whether cytokinetic associated markers also reappear in heart during myocardial response to hypertrophy, well-established in vitro and in vivo mouse and rat models for hypertrophy were investigated. In vivo models of pathological hypertrophy 4.2.2.1 β-adrenergic stimulated and hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart In order to determine whether there is re-appearance of cytokinetic markers during myocardial response to hypertrophy, immunoblots were performed on β-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol stimulated mouse heart and on hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart (Wiesel et al., 1997) cell lysates (Figure 4.3) with antibodies against different cytokinesis coupled proteins; RhoA (panel A), Cdc42 (panel B), Rac1 (panel C), ROCKII (panel D), and ROCKI (panel E) and the karyokinetic protein PCNA (panel F). A marked increase in the expression of all the cytokinesis associated proteins tested here along with PCNA could be observed in isoproterenol treated for one week (lane 2) and two weeks (lane 3) compared to the control (lane 1) and also in 1K1C mouse (lane 5) in contrast to control, sham operated mouse heart (lane 4). These results suggest that under a stressed state, cardiomyocytes do in fact attempt to re-enter the cell cycle, as all karyokinetic and cytokinetic associated proteins investigated here get upregulated; however, somehow cells cannot complete the cell cycle consequentially leading to even an increased binucleation or polyploidy level. 83 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.3: Re-expression of cytokinesis coupled proteins in β-adrenergic stimulated and in hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart. Immunoblot with different cytokinetic proteins on SDS samples of isoproterenol treated and 1K1C mouse heart together with their respective controls. There is a marked increase in the expression of all the cytokinesis coupled proteins; RhoA (panel A), Cdc42 (panel B), Rac1 (panel C), ROCKII (panel D), and ROCKI (panel E), including PCNA (panel F) in hypertrophic samples of isoproterenol treated mice after one week (lane 2) and two weeks (lane 3) compared to the control (lane 1) and in the 1K1C mouse (lane 5) in contrast to its control (lane 4), sham operated mouse heart. Equal amounts of the heart tissue were loaded; α-cardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). 4.2.2.2 Hypertension-induced hypertrophy of Dahl salt sensitive rats To further test our hypothesis of cardiomyocytes making an attempt to undergo complete cell division during hypertrophy by expressing karyokinetic and cytokinetic markers, hypertension-induced hypertrophic hearts of Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats (Satoh et al., 2003) were examined (Figure 4.4). This animal model develops hypertension, thus promoting myocardial hypertrophy, left ventricular (LV) dilation, and heart failure when fed on a highsalt diet (Inoko et al., 1994; Doi et al., 2000). Immunoblot analysis was performed on left ventricular tissue lysates obtained from three groups of Dahl salt rats which were on a high salt diet: (1) Dahl salt resistant (DR) rats served as a normotensive control, (Figure 4.4 (A), group 1, lane SR-14 and FW-2). (2) Dahl salt sensitive (DS) rats, (Figure 4.4 (A), group 2, lane SS-62, SS-64 and SS-66) and (3) DS rats treated with Y-27632, a selective ROCK inhibitor (Figure 4.4 (A), group3, lane SS-61, SS-67 and SS-68) were probed with different cytokinesis associated proteins; RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, ROCK II, and ROCK I. 84 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.4: (A): Re-expression of cytokinesis coupled proteins in hypertension-induced hypertrophy of Dahl salt sensitive rats. Immunoblot on Dahl salt sensitive (DS) and resistant rats (DR) fed on high salt diet with different cytokinesis related protein markers. SDS samples of left ventricular tissue of three groups: (1) DR rats as a normotensive control, (lane SR-14 and FW-2). (2) DS rats with no treatment, (lane SS-62, SS-64 and SS-66) (3) DS rats treated with Y-27632, a selective ROCK inhibitor (lane SS-61, SS-67 and SS-68) were probed with different cytokinesis associated proteins; RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, ROCKII, and ROCKI, including PCNA as a karyokinetic marker. DS rats, which did not undergo any treatment (group 2) and developed hypertrophy showed high expression of all the cytokinetic markers including PCNA in comparison to DR rats (group1), which served as normotensive controls. DS rats treated with Y-27632 (group 3) showed a slightly blunted response in their expression of cytokinesis markers in contrast to DS rats with no treatment (group2). Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; α-cardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). (B) Quantification of expression of cytokinetic proteins in Dahl salt induced hypertrophy model. Data are presented as mean ± standard error of calculated ratios of arbitrary units from three sets of each experiment. 85 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart DS rats, which did not undergo any treatment (Figure 4.4 (A), group 2) and had developed hypertrophy displayed high expression of all the cytokinetic markers in contrast to control DR rats (Figure 4.4 (A), group1). It has been previously shown that ROCK pathway inhibition in DS sensitive rats blunts the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), and thereby, preserves myocardial contractile function (Satoh et al., 2003). Hence as anticipated, DS rats treated with Y-27632, an inhibitor of ROCK kinase (Figure 4.4 (A), group 3) showed a slightly blunted response in expression of all the cytokinetic markers checked, in contrast to DS rats with no treatment (Figure 4.4 (A), group2). Quantification of expression of cytokinetic proteins in the Dahl salt induced hypertrophy model (Figure 4.4 (B)) clearly shows that cytokinesis associated proteins are elevated in Dahl salt sensitive rats compared to Dahl salt resistant rats, when fed on a high salt diet. Thus, implying that cardiomyocytes do make an attempt to complete division by upregulating both karyokinetic and cytokinetic machinery during hypertrophy. 4.2.2.3 Angiotensin over-expressing mice characterized by hypertrophy Ventricular extracts of transgenic mice over-expressing angiotensinogen in cardiomyocytes (Mazzolai et al., 1998), (Figure 4.5 (A)) and transgenic mice over-expressing angiotensinogen treated with the β adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol for four weeks (Figure 4.5 (B)), were probed for cytokinesis associated proteins; RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42, ROCKII, and ROCKI. As expected, there was a marked increase in the expression of all the cytokinesis associated proteins in cell lysates of mouse hearts over-expressing angiotensin (Figure 4.5, group 2 of A) and in angiotensinogen mice treated with isoproterenol (Figure 4.5, group 2 of B) when compared with their respective controls (Figure 4.5, group 1 of A) and (Figure 4.5, group 1 (angiotensinogen over-expression alone) and group 3 (wild type) of B). All these results imply that indeed there is division potential in the diseased hearts as evident from upregulated karyokinetic and cytokinetic protein markers in all the in vivo models tested here, to form functional cardiomyocytes, however; there is an obstruction which impedes the cells to do that and thus consequently repair the damaged myocardium. 86 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.5: Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in angiotensin over-expressing mice characterized by hypertrophy. Immunoblot on SDS samples of (A) transgenic mice overexpressing angiotensinogen in cardiomyocytes and in (B) transgenic mice overexpressing angiotensinogen treated with β adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol for four weeks, probed with cytokinesis associated proteins; RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42, ROCKII, and ROCKI. There is a marked increase in the expression of all the cytokinesis associated proteins in cell lysates of mouse hearts overexpressing angiotensin (group 2; of A) and in angiotensinogen mice treated with isoproterenol (group 2; of B) compared with controls (group 1; of A) and (group 1(angiotensinogen overexpressing mice alone) and 3 (wild type); of B) respectively. Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; αcardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). 87 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.2.3 Localization of upregulated cytokinetic protein markers in diseased heart We next investigated the subcellular distribution of upregulated cytokinetic proteins in the diseased hearts by immunofluorescence. Cryosections of wild type (Figure 4.6 A-D, I-L) and 1K1C mouse hearts (Figure 4.6 E-H, M-P)) were triple stained with antibodies to M protein (Fig. 4.6 B, F, J, N; red in overlay) to identify the cardiomyocytes, RhoA (Figure 4.6 C, G; green in overlay A,E) and Cdc42 (Figure 4.6 K, O; green in overlay I, M), were used as cytokinesis associated protein markers while non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIB (Figure 4.6 D, H, L, P; blue in overlay) was used to visualize cardiac fibroblasts. Single confocal sections revealed an absence of expression of cytokinesis-associated proteins in wild type sections (Figure 4.6 C, K) while at the same time 1K1C sections (Figure 4.6 G, O) displayed a drastic increase in cytoplasmic and myofibrillar distribution for both the cytokinetic proteins RhoA (Figure 4.6 G) and Cdc42 in the cardiomyocytes (Figure 4.6 O). Additionally there was an increase in fibrosis in sections from 1K1C hearts, as determined by staining for non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIB (Figure 4.6 H, P) in contrast to sections from sham-operated animals (Figure 4.6 D, L). 4.2.4 Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in an in-vitro model of hypertrophy To verify the results obtained from in vivo models of hypertrophy, a well-documented in vitro model of hypertrophy in cardiomyocytes (Deng et al., 2000) was next investigated. Primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) were grown in serum free medium containing hypertrophy inducing agents; phenylephrine (α-adrenergic receptor agonist with weak ßadrenergic receptor agonist activity; 100µM), isoproterenol (ß- adrenergic receptor agonist; 10µM) and norepinephrine (α and ß- adrenergic receptor agonist; 10µM) or vehicle for 72 hours. Triplicate samples of the respective condition were probed on immunoblots for cytokinesis associated proteins with antibodies (Figure 4.7); RhoA, Rac1, ROCK II, p-cofilin, polo like kinase and as karyokinetic markers PCNA, p-His H3 were chosen. All the triplicate samples of primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes treated with phenylephrine, isoproterenol and norepinephrine showed a marked increase in the expression of all karyokinetic and cytokinetic coupled proteins in contrast to the control cardiomyocytes. 88 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Quantification of expression of cytokinetic proteins in an in-vitro model of induced hypertrophy (Figure 4.7 (B)) shows that cytokinesis associated proteins are elevated during hypertrophic conditions induced by the agonists in comparison to the control neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. Figure 4.6: Confocal micrographs illustrating the localization of upregulated cytokinetic protein markers in diseased heart. Cryosections of wild type (panels A, B, C, D and I, J, K, L) and 1K1C mouse heart (panels E, F, G, H and M, N, O, P) triple stained with antibodies to M protein (panels B, F, J, N and red in overlay) to visualize cross striations in the cardiomyocytes, RhoA in (panels C, G and green in overlay A, E), Cdc42 in (panels K, O and green in overlay I, M), as cytokinesis associated protein marker and non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIB (panels D, H, L, P and blue in overlay) to visualize cardiac fibroblasts. Single confocal sections reveal that wild type sections (panels C and K) shows no cytokinetic proteins while at the same time 1K1C sections (panels G and O) displays a drastic increase in signal for both the cytokinetic proteins RhoA (panel G) and Cdc42 (panel O) in cardiomyocytes along with increased fibrosis (panels H and P) in contrast to their respective control (panel D and L). Bar represents 10 µm. 89 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.7: Re-expression of cytokinesis associated proteins in an in-vitro model of hypertrophy. (A) Immunoblot on cell lysates of primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) grown in serum free medium containing hypertrophy inducing agents; phenylephrine (α-AR agonist with weak ß-AR agonist activity; 100µM), isoproterenol (ß-AR agonist; 10µM) and norepinephrine (α and ß-AR agonist; 10µM) or vehicle for 72 hours. Triplicate samples of each condition were probed with cytokinesis associated proteins; RhoA, Rac1, ROCK II, p-cofilin, polo like kinase and for karyokinetic markers; PCNA, p-His H3. There is marked increase in the expression of all karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins tested here, in phenylephrine, isoproterenol and norepinephrine induced hypertrophic cardiomyocytes in contrast to control neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. (B) Quantification of expression of cytokinetic proteins in hypertrophic neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. Data are presented as mean ± standard error of calculated ratios of arbitrary units from three sets of each experiment. 90 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.2.5 Subcellular distribution of RhoA in primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) following the treatment with hypertrophy inducing agents Immunostaining of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) following the treatment with hypertrophy inducing agents was subsequently done to determine the localization of one of the upregulated cytokinetic proteins, RhoA. Cardiomyocytes were stained for the cytokinetic marker, RhoA; (Figure 4.8 I-L; green in overlay), for the myofibrillar protein, cardiac actin, (Figure 4.8 E-H; red in overlay) and DAPI to detect any binucleated cell resulting from incomplete cell division (Figure 4.8 M-P; blue in overlay). Single confocal sections revealed that while control cardiomyocytes displayed no signal for RhoA (Figure 4.8 I); a drastic increase in the signal for RhoA (Figure 4.8 J, K, L) could be observed, spread throughout the cytoplasm of the cardiomyocytes following the treatment with the hypertrophy inducing agents; phenylephrine (100µM), isoproterenol (10µM) and norepinephrine (10µM) respectively for 72 hours. Arrows in panels (Figure 4.8 N, O, P) point to the cardiomyocytes with two nuclei and the asterisk in panel (Figure 4.8 N and B in overlay) points to a tetranucleated cardiomyocyte which resulted due to the absence of cytoplasmic division or cytokinesis in these cells. 4.2.6 Binucleation in hypertrophic neonatal rat cardiomyocytes The consequential binucleation due to the lack of cytokinesis in primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes following the treatment with hypertrophy inducing agents was quantified by counting the number of mononucleated and binucleated cells from 200 isolated cardiomyocytes from two individual data sets obtained by confocal microscopy and is expressed in percentages (Figure 4.8). The results clearly show that the percentage of binucleation in cardiomyocytes treated with phenylephrine (100µM), isoproterenol (10µM) and norepinephrine (10µM) goes up by almost a factor of two. 91 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart Figure 4.8: Expression of RhoA is upregulated in primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) following the treatment with hypertrophy inducing agents. (a) Confocal micrographs of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes stained for cytokinetic marker, RhoA (panels I, J, K, L and green in overlay), for the myofibrillar protein cardiac actin, (panels E, F, G, H and red in overlay) and for DAPI to observe binucleation (panels M, N, O, P and blue in overlay). Single confocal sections reveal that while control cardiomyocytes display no signal for RhoA (panel I); a drastic increase in the signal for RhoA (panel J, K and L) distributed through out the cytoplasm can be seen following the treatment with the hypertrophy inducing agents; phenylephrine (100µM), isoproterenol (10µM) and norepinephrine (10µM) respectively for 72 hours. Arrows in panels (N, O and P) point to the binucleated cells and the asterisk in panel (N and B in overlay) points to a cardiomyocyte with four nuclei. Bar represents 10 µm. (b) Quantification of binucleation in hypertrophic neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. Data are presented as mean ± standard error of arbitrary ratios from the percentage of mononucleated and binucleated cells counted from 200 isolated cardiomyocytes from 2 individual sets using confocal microscope. 92 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart We conclude from our results that downregulation of many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis may be responsible for uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes after birth. Furthermore, the potential to undergo complete division does exist in the cardiomyocytes as determined by the re-expression of karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins during hypertrophy. The failure to undergo complete division could be due to the presence of stable, highly ordered and functional sarcomeres in the adult myocardium or could be due to the absence of degradation mechanisms (ubiquitin or calcium dependent) which facilitate division of embryonic cardiomyocytes by disintegrating the myofibrils (Ahuja et al., 2004). 93 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart 4.3 DISCUSSION Cardiomyocytes loose their ability to proliferate soon after birth (Zak, 1974; Clubb and Bishop, 1984; Oparil et al., 1984; Tam et al., 1995; Li et al., 1996). Before terminal withdrawal from the cell cycle, rodent cardiomyocytes undergo a final round of incomplete cell division, during which karyokinesis gets uncoupled from cytokinesis, resulting in binucleated cardiomyocytes. We wanted to investigate the hypothesis of cytokinesis being controlled at the signal transmission level i.e. the cells do not produce the necessary signal for promotion to cytokinesis and thus remain undivided. We checked the expression and localization of various signaling proteins associated with the formation of the contractile ring in the heart during development. The contractile ring has been investigated in postnatal cardiomyocytes from rat (Li et al., 1997a; Li et al., 1997b). However, these localization studies were restricted only to F-actin and non-muscle myosin and none of the other proteins involved in cytokinesis were analyzed. We demonstrate here for the first time that cardiomyocytes show a developmental stage specific expression of all the proteins like RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, ROCK-I, ROCK-II, p-cofilin associated with the formation of the actomyosin ring with high levels being only expressed at stages when cytokinesis still occurs. The results were surprising, as all of these proteins have been implicated to play a role in regulating other actomyosin dynamics of the cell like formation of stress fibres, focal adhesions, migration, maintaining morphology (Ridley, 1995; Narumiya, 1996; Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2002; Zhao and Rivkees, 2003), but it appears that they are only expressed in cardiomyocytes that are still able to divide and do not seem to play a major role in the adult heart. Vertebrates respond to injury through activation of committed progenitor cells or stem cells (e.g. bone marrow) or through proliferation of differentiated cells (liver or endothelial cells), (for review see Michalopoulos and DeFrances, 1997; Gage, 1998). In skeletal muscle, committed progenitor cells (satellite cells) located below the basal lamina are induced to proliferate in response to injury (Mauro, 1961). In contrast to skeletal muscles, a population of myosatellite-type cells, a potential source of regeneration, is not formed during cardiomyogenesis. The failure of the adult mammalian heart to reactivate the cell cycle accounts for a major difficulty in restoration of function to the damaged heart (Armstrong et al., 2000; Olson and Schneider, 2003). Nevertheless, mammalian cardiomyocytes retain the ability to undergo partial cell cycle reactivation following hypertrophic stimulation. The 94 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart increase in the activities of the G1/S phase cyclin-Cdk complexes has been described during development of pressure overload-induced LVH in rats (Li et al., 1998). Capasso et al showed that ventricular loading is coupled with DNA synthesis in adult cardiomyocytes after acute and chronic myocardial infarction in rats (Capasso et al., 1992). Similarly, it was found that ventricular failure occurring after acute myocardial infarction (Reiss et al., 1996) or conditions of global ischemia (Reiss et al., 1993), upregulates the mRNA levels of PCNA and histone-H3. In humans, it has been repeatedly identified that after myocardial injury the ploidy level and number of nuclei per myocyte increases (Beltrami et al., 1997; Herget et al., 1997). Also, the percentage of cardiomyocytes expressing PCNA increases in diseased human hearts particularly in response to hypertrophy (Arbustini et al., 1993). Nevertheless, none of these studies documented an increase in the number of cardiomyocytes subsequent to hypertrophic stimulation. Thus, it seems that the heart is endowed with a programme that protects against uncontrolled proliferation of contracting cardiomyocytes. However, recently it was shown that p38 MAP kinase inhibition along with growth factor stimulation in vitro can induce proliferation in adult mammalian cardiomyocytes (Engel et al., 2005). In order to determine whether cytokinetic potential exists in heart during myocardial response to hypertrophy, well-established in vitro and in vivo mouse and rat models for hypertrophy were investigated. All our in vitro and in vivo model results reveal that while stressed myocardium tries to adapt to the increased work load there is indeed an upregulation of contractile ring associated proteins, representing the fact that cardiomyocytes do make an attempt to undergo complete division. These results demonstrate that molecules and mechanisms involved in maintaining embryonic growth are redeployed in response to pathological cardiac hypertrophy in the adult heart. However, it seems that there is a mechanism of hindrance which impedes the cleavage of dividing myocytes resulting in increase in the level of binucleation or ploidy. We believe that this mechanical hindrance could be posed by the presence of stable, highly ordered and functional sarcomeres in the adult myocardium. It is known that during the progressive differentiation from embryonic to a postnatal stage of cardiomyocytes, there is a gradual increase in the size, number and complexity of organization of myofibrils (Zak, 1974; Rumyantsev, 1977; Ehler et al., 1999; Perriard et al., 2003; Hirschy et al., 2006). This, together with the downregulation in the expression levels of proteins that regulate cell cycle and cytokinesis respectively, might contribute to uncoupling of karyokinetic and cytokinetic events as seen in the postnatal cardiomyocytes. In addition, embryonic cardiomyocytes have adapted an effective mechanism 95 Chapter 4 Cytokinesis in heart of disassembly of myofibrils to undergo cell division (Kaneko et al., 1984; Ahuja et al., 2004). To go through cell division, disassembly of the contractile elements, the myofibrils, has to take place. This disassembly occurs in two steps with Z-disc and thin (actin)-filamentassociated proteins getting disassembled before disassembly of the M-bands and the thick (myosin) filaments (Ahuja et al., 2004). A possible role of ubiquitin dependent degradation during this process has been suggested, which consequently facilitates the disassembly of stable myofibrils in embryonic heart hence making the division possible (Ahuja et al., 2004). This might explain why embryonic cardiomyocytes retain the potential to proliferate whereas adult cardiomyocytes do not. Another reason for the inability of cardiomyocytes to complete cell division during hypertrophy could be the absence of these degradation mechanisms which could disassemble the stable myofibrils despite the fact that the cytokinetic machinery is primed up during this period. Activation of ubiquitin dependent degradation mechanism has been proposed during the progression of compensated hypertrophy to heart failure (Hein et al., 2003). It was suggested that ubiquitin binds to contractile or membrane proteins destined for degradation but because of proteasomal insufficiency, the complexes are accumulated which might cause nuclear fragmentation. However, the role of ubiquitin dependent degradation machinery in response to hypertrophic stimulation needs to be established in detail. In conclusion, our results suggest that after birth cardiomyocytes downregulate many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis which may be responsible for uncoupling cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes. In addition, under stressed or hypertrophic conditions adult cardiomyocytes retain the potential to divide again as determined by the redeployment of the division machinery during this time. The mechanisms which do not allow complete division to occur at this time needs to be understood in detail and will determine the future of research into myocardial regeneration. The developmentally regulated cessation of cytokinesis makes cardiomyocytes an interesting model system to investigate the factors involved in regulation of cytokinesis. 96 CHAPTER 5 Additional results 97 Chapter 5 Additional results 5. Additional results Apart from all the results documented in previous chapters there are some other interesting observations made which are significant and merit to be mentioned here. 5.1 Role of calcium dependent calpain mediated degradation in dividing cardiomyocytes During skeletal muscle wasting it has been shown that increased calcium dependent calpain mediated activity provides an early and perhaps a rate limiting step, accounting for degradation of Z-disc associated proteins and release of actin and myosin from the myofibrils which are then subsequently ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome (Hasselgren et al., 2005). As shown earlier in chapter 2, ubiquitin expression gets upregulated in dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes (Figure 2.6) suggesting that protein degradation also of components of the sarcomere or of proteins, which control sarcomere integrity, might happen during cell division. To assess the role of calpain mediated degradation also in dividing cardiomyocytes, we stained cultured cardiomyocytes with antibodies against heart specific calpain-1 (Figure 5.1 C, G, K; green in overlay) in combination with MyBP-C to delineate the myofibrils (Figure 5.1 B, F, J; red in overlay) and with tubulin to assess the stage of cell division (Figure 5.1 D, H, L; blue in overlay). While in interphase cardiomyocytes the signal for the calpain antibody is rather weak; (Figure 5.1 C, cell in top left corner); once cardiomyocytes enter mitosis, calpain just like ubiquitin starts to be spread throughout the cytoplasm (Figure 5.1 C, G, K). Due to the low frequency of cell division in our cultures as well as in the developing heart in situ, we were unable to analyse by biochemical means, whether myofibrillar proteins themselves were degraded by ubiquitin or calcium dependent pathways. However, the high intensity of the ubiquitin and calpain signal could mean that protein degradation also of components of the sarcomere, takes place during cell division. 5.2 Expression of calpain-1 in heart during development To determine the activity of calpain in heart during development, we performed immunoblotting with antibodies against heart specific calpain-1 at different stages of mouse heart development (Figure 5.2). In the embryonic heart (Figure 5.2, lane 1), high levels of expression of calpain could be found, which get downregulated by the first postnatal week and are almost absent in adult heart (Figure 5.2, lane 4). This suggests that calpain is highly 98 Chapter 5 Additional results expressed in cardiomyocytes that are still able to divide and does not seem to play a major role in the adult heart. Figure 5.1: Expression of calpain-1 is upregulated in dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes. Cultured cardiomyocytes were stained with antibodies to MyBP-C (B, F, J; red in overlay) together with antibodies against calpain-1 (C, G, K; green in overlay) and against tubulin (D, H, L; blue in overlay) to identify the stage of cell division. Single confocal sections reveal that while interphase cardiomyocytes display only little signal for calpain-1 (panel C, top left); a drastic increase in the signal for calpain can be detected in cardiomyocytes in metaphase (panel C, G) as well as in late anaphase (panel K). Bar represents 10 µm. Figure 5.2: Expression pattern of calpain-1 during different developmental stages of the heart. Cell lysates from embryonic heart (E14, lane 1), day of birth (P0, lane 2), day eight (P8, lane 3), adult mouse ventricular muscle (lane 4), were analysed by immunoblotting for expression of calpain-1. Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; cardiac α-actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). 99 Chapter 5 Additional results 5.3 Disassembly of myofibrils delayed after treatment with NCO-700 To further address the role of calpain-mediated degradation for myofibril disassembly, an inhibitor that interferes with the calcium dependent calpain pathway was used on cultured embryonic cardiomyocytes. Treatment with NCO-700 leads to metaphase cells that still display cross-striations in the alpha-actinin staining, while control cells show diffuse localization of these proteins (Figure 5.3). Another myofibrillar protein tested was the M-band protein myomesin which displays a comparatively intact localization pattern compared to the Z-disc protein alpha-actinin during metaphase (Ahuja et al., 2004). After NCO-700 treatment myomesin staining revealed cells with comparatively even more intact striations in contrast to untreated ones. Figure 5.3: Disassembly of myofibrils is delayed in cardiomyocytes that were treated with NCO-700 to inhibit calcium dependent-calpain degradation. Single confocal sections of cardiomyocytes stained with monoclonal antibodies to myomesin (B; red in A, both panels), sarcomeric alpha-actinin (D; red in C, both panels) and for tubulin (blue in A, C; both panels) as well as for phosphorylated histone (green in A, C; both panels) to identify the stage of mitosis. While in control cells at metaphase alpha-actinin is localized in a diffuse fashion (D; first panel), cross-striated myofibrils can still be seen in NCO-700 treated cardiomyocytes (D; second panel). For myomesin, control cells display comparatively intact striation than alpha-actinin (B; first panel), however after the treatment displays even better cross-striated pattern than the control (B; second panel). Bar represents 10 µm. This experiment further confirms our observation of myofibrils being disassembled to achieve successful cell division in cardiomyocytes and that this disassembly process is probably regulated by factors, which are part of calpain and ubiquitin dependent pathways. 100 Chapter 5 Additional results 5.4 Role of Cullin3 in dividing cardiomyocytes To further characterize the role of ubiquitin dependent proteolysis in embryonic heart during division, we next investigated the role of cullin3, an ubiquitin ligase (E3). Cullin family proteins form a part of SCF (Skp1-Cullin-F-box) complexes, which are a major class of E3 ligases that are required to selectively target substrates for ubiquitin-dependent degradation by the 26S proteasome (for review see Deshaies, 1999). Among the characterized cullins, cullin1 (CUL-1)-containing SCF (Skp1-Cul1/Cdc53-F-box protein), cullin3 (CUL-3)-containing BCR (BTB domain-Cul3-RING), and cullin4 (CUL-4)-containing VDC (V-DDB1-Cul4A) complexes promote specific protein ubiquitination and degradation that are critical for cellcycle progression, cell differentiation and signal transduction (Willems et al., 2004; Petroski and Deshaies, 2005). Conjugation of the ubiquitin-like protein Nedd8 to the cullin subunit (neddylation) positively regulates activity of SCF complexes, most likely by increasing their affinity for the E2 conjugated to ubiquitin (Kawakami et al., 2001). Neddylation is essential for cullin-organized ligase activities in vivo, as observed for Drosophila melanogaster CUL-1 in regulating the protein stability of cyclin E (Ou et al., 2002), Caenorhabditis elegans CUL-3 in MEI-1-katanin (Pintard et al., 2003) and fission yeast CUL3 in Btb3p (Geyer et al., 2003). Recent evidence suggests that CUL-3 inactivation by RNAi results in cytokinetic defects in HeLa cells, consequently leading to multinucleation (I. Sumara and M. Peter personal communication). Currently the downstream targets of CUL-3 involved during the cytokinesis process are being investigated in M. Peter’s laboratory, at ETH. To check the expression of CUL-3, an E3 ligase specifically implicated during cytokinesis, we performed western blotting with antibodies against CUL-3 at different stages of mouse heart development (Figure 5.4). In the embryonic heart (Figure 5.4, lane 1), active or neddylated form of cullin3 expression could be found, which is essential for cullin-organized ligase activity in vivo. This gets downregulated by the first postnatal week and is almost absent in adult heart, judged by the disappearance of the neddylated band (Figure 5.4, lane 4). However, low levels of inactive cullin3 are still expressed in the adult heart. It thus appears that the cullin3 pathway, part of ubiquitin dependent proteolysis, is active in cardiomyocytes that are still able to divide and does not seem to play a major role in the adult heart. 101 Chapter 5 Additional results Figure 5.4: Expression pattern of CUL-3 during developmental stages of the heart. Cell lysates from embryonic heart (E14, lane 1), day of birth (P0, lane 2), day eight (P8, lane 3), adult mouse ventricular muscle (lane 4), were analysed by immunoblotting for expression of CUL-3. The neddylated form of CUL-3 can be detected in samples from embryonic heart, starts to get downregulated after birth and is completely absent in the adult heart. However, low levels of inactive cullin3 are still expressed in the adult heart. Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; α-cardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). 5.5 Subcellular distribution of Cullin3 in dividing cardiomyocytes To find out where cullin3 is localized in the cells, we determined the subcellular distribution of CUL-3 in cultured rat embryonic cardiomyocytes by triple immunofluorescence (Figure 5.5). Cardiomyocytes were stained for CUL-3; (Figure 5.5 G, H, I; green in overlay), for the myofibrillar protein sarcomeric alpha-actinin, (Figure 5.5 D, E, F; red in overlay) and tubulin to detect the mitotic stages (Figure 5.5 J, K, L; blue in overlay). Single confocal sections revealed that while control cardiomyocytes displayed no signal for CUL-3; a drastic increase in the signal (Figure 5.5 G, H I) could be observed, which is mainly associated with the spindle during late anaphase and telophase and the midbody of the cells in cytokinesis. The localization pattern of CUL-3 was consistent with an active role of CUL-3 in final stages of division, cytokinesis in particular. At present the target substrates for ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis are not known during division of embryonic cardiomyocytes and further work is required to determine the role of protein degradation in regulating myofibrillar disassembly during division in embryonic heart. 102 Chapter 5 Additional results Figure 5.5: Expression of CUL-3 is upregulated in dividing cardiomyocytes. Cultured cardiomyocytes were stained with antibodies to sarcomeric alpha-actinin (D, E, F and red in overlay) together with antibodies against CUL-3 (G, H, I and green in overlay) and against tubulin (J, K, L and blue in overlay) to identify the stage of cell division. Single confocal sections reveal that while interphase cardiomyocytes display only little signal for CUL3 (panel I, bottom); a drastic increase in the signal for CUL-3 can be detected in cardiomyocytes in anaphase (panel G), telophase (panel H) and cytokinesis (panel I). Bar represents 10 µm. 103 Chapter 5 Additional results 5.6 Re-expression of Cullin3 in heart during hypertrophy As determined and stated in chapter 4 our results revealed that while stressed myocardium tries to adapt to the increased work load during hypertrophy there is indeed an upregulation of cytokinetic proteins associated with the contractile ring, representing the fact that cardiomyocytes do make an attempt to undergo complete division during this time. However, it seems that there is some hindrance which impedes the cleavage of dividing myocytes resulting in incomplete division. One reason which we hypothesize for the inability of cardiomyocytes to complete cell division during hypertrophy is the absence or insufficiency of these degradation mechanisms which disassemble the stable myofibrils in embryonic cardiomyocytes, thereby facilitating division. Activation of ubiquitin dependent degradation mechanisms has been proposed during the progression of compensated hypertrophy to heart failure (Hein et al., 2003). It was suggested that ubiquitin binds to contractile or membrane proteins destined for degradation but because of proteasomal insufficiency, the complexes are accumulated which might cause nuclear fragmentation. However, the role of the ubiquitin dependent degradation machinery in response to hypertrophic stimulation needs to be established in detail. In an attempt to study the role of ubiquitin dependent degradation during hypertrophy, we determined the expression of CUL-3, an E3 ligase, during hypertrophy in ventricular extracts of transgenic mice over-expressing angiotensinogen in cardiomyocytes (Mazzolai et al., 1998), and the same treated with β adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol for four weeks (Figure 5.6). Even though the neddylated form of CUL-3 does not accumulate in samples from hypertrophic hearts, the intensity of the band observed is stronger compared to the wild type heart samples. However, much more work is required to evaluate the significance of this finding and to determine the functional role and expression profile of different ubiquitin ligases like CUL-3 or for proteasome during cardiac development and disease. 104 Chapter 5 Additional results Figure 5.6: Re-expression of CUL-3 in angiotensin over-expressing mice characterized by the hypertrophy. Immunoblot on SDS samples of transgenic mice overexpressing angiotensinogen and treated with β adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol for four weeks, probed with antibodies against cullin3. Even though the neddylated form of CUL-3 does not accumulate in samples from hypertrophic hearts, the intensity of the band observed is stronger compared to the wild type heart. Equal amounts of heart tissue were loaded; α-cardiac actin was used as loading control (bottom panel). 105 CHAPTER 6 General discussion and outlook 106 Chapter 6 General discussion and outlook 6. General discussion and outlook The differentiative and proliferative capacity of cardiac muscle cells during development and their potential to regenerate during disease has in recent years become a topic of great interest and scrutiny (Leri et al., 2002; Keating, 2004; Busk et al., 2005; Engel et al., 2005; Laflamme and Murry, 2005). The work presented here aims to address several key issues of cardiomyocyte cell division during development and disease. One of the novel findings of my study was to demonstrate that during embryonic cardiomyocyte division, myofibril disassembly occurs in a sequential manner. Myofibrillar proteins that are associated with the Z-disc or the thin filaments display a diffuse localization pattern at a time when the thick filaments are still comparatively intact. It is likely that ubiquitin dependent degradation is involved during this process, which consequently facilitates the disassembly of stable myofibrils in the embryonic heart hence making cell division possible (Ahuja et al., 2004). Unfortunately, the low rate of division in culture and in situ did not permit a thorough biochemical analysis of the ubiquitinated proteins. One approach to identify the ubiquitinated substrates would be to first synchronize the cultures of dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes (for e.g. with nocodazole) and then to co-immunoprecipitate ubiquitin with probable sarcomeric protein targets. The co-precipitates can then be analyzed by mass spectrometry. Further interaction between ubiquitin and the target protein can be confirmed by pair wise coimmunoprecipitation or alternatively by yeast two hybrid techniques. Preliminary experiments in our laboratory showed that the subcellular signals for ubiquitin and MURF-2, a ubiquitin ligase are upregulated in cultured dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes (Ahuja, Ehler, Gautel and Perriard, unpublished observations). In addition, we observed high expression of another ubiquitin ligase, CUL-3 in dividing embryonic cardiomyocytes. It was recently shown, that MURF-1 degrades troponin I in heart (Kedar et al., 2004). The interaction of MURF-1 with the myofibrillar giant protein titin at the M-band during sarcomere assembly has also been seen (Pizon et al., 2002), although the functional consequences of this interaction remains to be explored. The examination of the functional role and natural substrates for ubiquitin ligases like MURFs and CUL-3 during division would provide deeper insight into the process of ubiquitin mediated proteolysis in heart during division. Cytokinesis is uncoupled from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes during early postnatal development. An understanding of this process is of fundamental interest as it may hold the key to our understanding of (i) termination of cell division after birth in cardiomyocytes and 107 Chapter 6 General discussion and outlook (ii) lack of replacement of damaged cardiac tissue in adult vertebrates. We suspect that this uncoupling phenomenon occurs because cardiomyocytes show a developmental stage specific expression of all the proteins that are coupled with the formation of the contractile ring such as Rho GTPases and their downstream effectors with high levels being only expressed at stages when cytokinesis still occurs (Ahuja et al., In preparation). This suggests that the downregulation of many regulatory and cytoskeletal components involved in cytokinesis may be responsible for uncoupling cytokinesis from karyokinesis in cardiomyocytes after birth. If this is true, then inhibition of these signalling pathways implicated in the induction of cytokinesis with an antagonist should lead to multinucleated cells in the embryonic heart. On the contrary, over-expression with an agonist of these signalling pathways in neonatal cardiomyocytes should overcome the block and drive them through cytokinesis. Further work, combining different approaches like time-lapse analysis of cardiomyocytes with a cytokinetic marker and a nuclear envelope protein marked with different fluorescent tags would yield more information regarding the exact timings of localization of these markers to the cleavage furrow. A major drawback of the currently used transient transfection method for expression of GFP/RFP-tagged myofibrillar components is the low transfection rate of primary cardiomyocyte cultures. This, combined with low proliferation activity, is likely to render any interpretation difficult. In order to increase the number of transgenic cells, alternative strategies like employing recombinant adenovirus for transfection can be envisaged. It would be also of interest to examine the phenotypes of embryonic cardiomyocytes when expression of these cytokinetic markers is abrogated by RNAi or when their respective gene(s) are knocked out. This may help to establish a functional role of these proteins in the cessation of cytokinesis in cardiomyocytes during heart development. Although cell cycle exit may be necessary to facilitate myocardial function under normal conditions (Ahuja et al., 2004), many cardiovascular diseases are associated with a significant loss of working myocytes. Therefore, development of means to reactivate the cardiomyocyte cell cycle in a controlled manner can be extremely beneficial for myocardial repair. Although several groups have been able to show re-entry of cardiomyocytes into the cell cycle by genetically manipulating cell cycle regulatory factors, thus far true evidence of cytokinesis in adult cardiomyocytes has yet to be demonstrated (for review see Field, 2004; Regula et al., 2004). In our study we found that while the pathologically stressed myocardium tries to adapt to the increased work load during hypertrophy, this response is accompanied by an upregulation of both karyokinetic and cytokinetic proteins. These results demonstrate that 108 Chapter 6 General discussion and outlook molecules and mechanisms involved in maintaining embryonic growth are redeployed in response to pathological cardiac hypertrophy in the adult heart. We hypothesize that failure to undergo complete division could be due to (i) the presence of highly stable, ordered and functional sarcomeres in the adult myocardium or (ii) the absence of degradation mechanisms (ubiquitin or calcium dependent) which allows division in embryonic cardiomyocytes by disintegrating myofibrils. One approach to prove the first hypothesis could be by loosening up the stable myofibrillar cytoskeleton and thus promoting cytokinesis. Myofibrillar breakdown can be induced by the over-expression of cytoplasmic actin isoforms (Von Arx et al., 1995), thin filament associated proteins like tropomodulin or mutant contractile proteins that are known to induce weakening of myofibrillar structures (Sussman et al., 1998). Alternatively, myofibrils can be destabilised using inhibitors of collagen synthesis like cis-hydroxyl-L-proline and ethyl-3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, that were previously shown to interfere with the myofibril formation in cardiomyocytes (Fisher and Periasamy, 1994). Alternatively, one could use different stem cell types that differentiate into cardiac muscle cells in vitro like mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells or P19 embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. These cells have been previously used as model systems to study cardiomyocyte differentiation that led to detailed insights into the functional role of cardiac specific transcription factors, signaling pathways and cardiac commitment and repair (for review see Pasumarthi and Field, 2002; van der Heyden and Defize, 2003). Cardiomyocytes derived from both ES and P19Cl6 cell lines can also be used as controls for cultured adult cardiomyocytes in order to show that with less mature and fewer myofibrils there is no physical barrier for cardiomyocytes to complete division. Owing to their high proliferation rates these model systems can in addition be used to identify the sarcomeric substrates for ubiquitin dependent proteolysis during division by biochemical assays. However, in our laboratory we were unable to derive an adequate amount of cardiomyocytes from these cells for performing biochemical experiments. The second hypothesis, of the absence of degradation mechanisms which might maintain the stability of myofibrils during hypertrophy, also needs to be looked at. It seems from our preliminary results that activation of CUL-3, an E3 ligase, takes place during hypertrophy. In addition, another group proposed the activation of ubiquitin dependent degradation mechanisms during the progression of compensated hypertrophy to heart failure (Hein et al., 2003). It was suggested that ubiquitin binds to contractile or membrane proteins destined for degradation but because of proteasomal insufficiency, the complexes are accumulated which causes nuclear fragmentation. Thus, proteasomal insufficiency could be another limiting 109 Chapter 6 General discussion and outlook factor which does not allow the disintegration of myofibrils during hypertrophy. Thus far, not much information about the functional role and expression profile of different ubiquitin ligases or for the proteasome is known during cardiac development and disease and the subject surely needs to be investigated further in detail. Research into myocardial regeneration has an exciting future, especially if the factors that regulate the withdrawal of cardiomyocytes from the cell cycle are understood. The gradual increase in the size, number and complexity of organization of myofibrils during the progressive differentiation from embryonic to a postnatal stage might be an important factor regulating the withdrawal from cell cycle. With the hypertrophic growth drawing in during development and after birth caused by the increased workload on the heart, division might be simply too costly from an energetic point of view. This together with the downregulation in the expression levels of proteins that regulate cell cycle and cytokinesis respectively might contribute to cessation of cell cycle in cardiomyocytes after birth. Investigation of model organisms that exhibit an inherent capacity for myocardial repair like newt and zebrafish may also shed light on additional regulatory mechanisms that can be exploited to stimulate a similar regenerative response in the mammalian heart. In summary, the field is still at its infancy with some progress having been made through my work. There are certainly new and exciting discoveries yet to be made and new insights to be gained. 110 CHAPTER 7 Material and methods 111 Chapter 7 Material and methods 7 Material and methods 7.1 Isolation and culture of embryonic and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (ERC and NRC) Embryonic (day 14) and neonatal rat ventricular hearts were dissected, digested with collagenase (Worthington Biochemical Corp., Free-hold, NJ, USA) and pancreatin (Gibco Laboratories, Grand Island, NY, USA) and cultured in Maintenance medium which contained 20% medium M199, 75% DBSS-K, 4% horse serum, 4 mM glutamine, 1% penicillin/streptomycin, 0.1 mM phenylephrine; (DBSS-K: 6.8 g/l NaCl, 0.14 mM NaH2PO4, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 0.2 mM MgSO4, 1 mM dextrose, 2.7 mM NaHCO3) in fibronectin-coated (10 µg/ml; Sigma) plastic dishes (Nunc; (Ahuja et al., 2004)). The maintenance medium for neonatal rat cardiomyocyte maintenance was alike but lacked serum and phenylephrine. 7.2 Fixation and staining of cultured cardiomyocytes The cells were rinsed briefly in MP buffer (Ahuja et al., 2004), were either fixed for 10 minutes with 4% paraformaldehyde in MP buffer, then washed with MP buffer again and permeabilized with 0.2% Triton X-100 in MP for 5 min or alternatively fixed in methanol for 5 minutes at –20˚C. Primary and secondary antibodies were diluted using 1% BSA in PBS and incubations were carried out at room temperature for 1 h. After final washing three times with PBS, the cells were mounted in 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 9.5)-glycerol (3:7) including 50 mg/ml n-propyl gallate as anti-fading reagent (Ahuja et al., 2004) and the coverslips were sealed with nail polish. 7.3 PFA-fixed heart whole mount preparations The hearts of E14.5 mouse embryos were dissected in PBS and rinsed briefly with MP buffer followed by fixation in 4% PFA in MP buffer for 90 minutes. After several washes in PBS, the hearts were treated with hyaluronidase (1 mg/ml; Sigma) in PBS for 45 minutes at RT (room temperature) in order to remove the cardiac jelly and to ensure access for the antibodies to the inner myocardial wall (Tokuyasu and Maher, 1987). This was followed by 112 Chapter 7 Material and methods permeabilization with 0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS for 45 minutes. After further washes in PBS and blocking with 5% NGS (normal pre-immune goat serum), 1% BSA (bovine serum albumin) in PBS for 45 minutes, the hearts were incubated with the primary antibody mixtures, diluted in blocking solution, shaking overnight at 4°C. After 4x2 hours washing in PBS with 0.002% Triton X-100 (PBT), the secondary antibodies were applied for overnight at 4°C. The hearts were washed with PBT for 6x1 hour and mounted on slides as described above (Ehler et al., 1999). 7.4 Antibodies used for immunofluorescence Table 7.1 Primary antibodies used for immunofluorescence Type and specificity Dilution Source mM a sarc. α-actinin, clone EA53 1:500 Sigma mM a myomesin, clone B4 1:50 Obtained from E. Perriard, ETH, Zürich, Switzerland pR a MyBP-C 1:100 mRt a tubulin, clone YOL1/34 1:100 Abcam, UK pR a β-catenin 1:200 Sigma pR a ubiquitin 1:25 Sigma pR a phos.Histone H3 1:500 Upstate Biotechnology, Luzern, Switzerland 1:5 Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, Iowa, USA mM a titin clone T51 1:2 Obtained from Prof. Fürst, Postdam, Germany mM a titin clone T12 1:2 Obtained from Prof. Fürst, Postdam, Germany pRt a cardiac MyBP-C 1:100 mM a α-cardiac actin 1:50 Progen, Heidelberg, Germany mM a non-muscle myosin IIB 1:20 Chemicon, Temecula, CA, USA mM a RhoA 1:50 Santa Cruz, CA, USA mM a sarc. myosin heavy chain, clone A4.1025 Obtained from Prof. M.Gautel, King`s College, London, UK Obtained from Prof. M.Gautel, King`s College, London, UK 113 Chapter 7 Material and methods mM a Cdc42 1:100 Santa Cruz, CA, USA mM a Rac1 1:100 BD Biosceinces mM a M-protein, clone AA259 1:3 Obtained from Prof. Fürst, Postdam, Germany mM a calpain-1, domain-II 1:100 Calbiochem, Switzerland pR a MURF-2 1:20 pR a CUL-3 1:50 Obtained from Prof. M.Gautel, King`s College, London, UK Obtained from I.Sumara, ETH, Zürich, Switzerland Polyclonal rabbit antibodies against different septins were characterized in the lab of Prof. William Trimble (Beites et al., 1999; Xie et al., 1999; Surka et al., 2002; Xue et al., 2004). With the exception of SEPT5, all anti-septin antibodies were raised in rabbits against the following human sequence peptides unless otherwise indicated: SEPT1 – EDRQVPDASARTAQTLC (mouse); SEPT2 – MSKQQPTQFINPETGC (mouse); SEPT3 MSELPEPRPKPAVPC; SEPT4 - CDFPIPAVPPGTDPE; SEPT6 - MAATDIARQVGEGC; SEPT7 - RILEQQNSSRTLEKNKKKGKIFC; SEPT8 - TLDERFSNAEPEPRC; SEPT9 TDAAPKRVEIQVPKPC; SEPT11 - MAVAVGRPSNEELRNC. The peptides were chosen because they were unique to each septin and not significantly similar to any other proteins in the GenBank database. Crude serum was affinity purified and eluted from columns of covalently bound peptide. Mouse monoclonal anti-SEPT5 was obtained from Chemicon International (Temecula, CA). For immunofluorescence, SEPT 2, 6 and 9 were used at a dilution of 1:500. 114 Chapter 7 Material and methods Table 7.2 Secondary antibodies used for immunofluorescence Type and specificity Dilution Source G a R Cy2 1:100 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) Do a Rt Cy3 (no cross-reaction with mouse Ig) 1:100 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) Do a M Cy5 (no cross-reaction with rat Ig) 1:100 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) G a M Cy3 1:1000 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) G a M IgM (µ-chain specific) FITC 1:100 Sigma H a M FITC (no cross-reaction with rat Ig) 1:50 Vector G a R Cy5 1:100 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) Do a M IgM (µ-chain specific) Cy5 1:100 Jackson Laboratory (distributed by Milan) G a M IgA (a-chain specific) FITC 1:20 Sigma Type and specificity Dilution Source DAPI 1:100 Molecular Probes Alexa 546-phalloidin 1:100 Molecular Probes Table 7.3 Non-immune dyes 7.5 Confocal microscopy The specimen were analysed using confocal microscopy on an inverted microscope DM IRB/E equipped with a true confocal scanner SP2 AOBS, a PL APO 63x/1.32 oil and a PL APO 100x/1.40 oil immersion objective (Leica) as well as argon, helium-neon and UV lasers. 115 Chapter 7 Material and methods Image processing was done on a Silicon Graphics workstation using Imaris® (Bitplane AG, Zürich), a 3D multichannel image processing software specialized for confocal microscopy data sets. 7.6 SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting Dissected ventricular hearts from E (embryonic day) 14 embryos, P (postnatal day) 0, P8 and adult mice were freeze slammed in liquid nitrogen, resuspended in a modified version of SDS-sample buffer (3.7 M urea, 134.6 mM Tris, pH 6.8, 5.4% SDS, 2.3% NP-40, 4.45% βmercaptoethanol, 4% glycerol and 6 mg/100 ml Bromophenol and boiled for 2 minutes (Ehler et al., 2001). For cultured neonatal cardiomyocytes, the same SDS-sample buffer was used to scrape the cells off the dish after their respective treatment. The SDS-samples were run on 7.5% or 15% polyacrylamide minigels (Bio-Rad, Glattbrugg, Switzerland). The proteins were blotted overnight onto nitrocellulose (Hybond-C extra, Amersham, Zurich, Switzerland (Ehler et al., 2001). After the transferred proteins had been visualized with Ponceau Red (Serva, Heidelberg, Germany), unspecific binding regions were blocked with 5% non-fat dry milk (or 3% BSA for phosph. Histone H3/Cofilin) in washing buffer (0.9% NaCl, 9mM Tris, pH 7.4, 0.1% Tween-20) for 1 hour at RT. Primary and secondary horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated antibodies were diluted in washing buffer with 0.1% milk and incubated for 1 hour, respectively, with intermittent washing in washing buffer. After a final wash in washing buffer a chemiluminescence reaction was performed according to the manufacturer (Amersham and Pierce, Socochim, Lausanne, Switzerland, respectively) and results were visualized on Fuji Medical X-Ray films. Bands of the expected molecular mass, as judged by Kaleidoscope Prestained Standards (Bio-Rad) were present in the positive control with all the antibodies used. 116 Chapter 7 Material and methods 7.7 Antibodies used for immunoblotting Table 7.4 Primary antibodies used for immunoblotting Type and specificity Dilution Source pR a phosph. Histone H3 1:1000 Upstate Biotechnology, Luzern, Switzerland mM a α-cardiac actin 1:1000 Progen, Heidelberg, Germany mM a RhoA 1:500 Santa Cruz, CA, USA mM a Cdc42 1:1000 Santa Cruz, CA, USA mM a Rac1 1:1000 BD Biosceinces pR a phosph. cofilin 1:1000 pR a ROCK I 1:1000 mM a ROCK II 1:1000 BD Biosceinces mM a PCNA 1:500 Santa Cruz, CA, USA pR a Polo like kinase 1 1:1000 Upstate Biotechnology, Luzern, Switzerland mM a calpain-1, domain-II 1:1000 Calbiochem, Switzerland pR a CUL-3 1:500 Obtained from I.Sumara, ETH, Zürich, Switzerland Obtained from James Bamburg, Colourado State University, Colourado Obtained from Didier Job, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Medicale, France Table 7.5 Secondary antibodies used for immunoblotting Type and specificity Dilution Source HRPO G a M IgG 1:3000 DAKO Diagnostics AG, Zug, Switzerland HRPO G a R IgG 1:3000 Calbiochem, Juro supply, Luzern, Switzerland 117 Chapter 7 Material and methods 7.8 Drug Treatment Cultured embryonic rat cardiomyocytes were treated with ROCK inhibitor-Y-27632 (Alexis) at a concentration of 1mM for 4 h, with Cytochalasin D (Sigma) at 100µg/ml for 1h or with Blebbistatin (Calbiochem) at a concentration of 100µM for 2h just before fixation. Cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were treated with Phenylephrine (Sigma) at a concentration of 100µM, with Isoproterenol (Sigma) at 10µM and Norepinephrine (Sigma) at 10µM for 72 h just before fixation or before preparing SDS-samples. The proteasome inhibitor MG132 (Sigma) and calpain-1 inhibitor NCO-700 (Sigma) were used at a concentration of 20 µM and 1mM for 3 and 1 hour respectively just before fixation. 7.9 Cryosections Hearts rinsed in ice cooled PBS were frozen in liquid nitrogen using Isopentane as cryoprotectant. The heart was mounted in Tissue tek OCT medium (Plano W.Plannet AG, Wetzlar, Germany) and cryosections (20 µm) were cut in an HM560 MV cryostat (Microm, Walldorf, Germany) at –20°C, then retrieved on gelatinized microscope slides for immunostaining. 7.10 Immunofluorescence of cryosections The protocol for staining cryosections was the same as that for isolated cells except that the sections were blocked with 5% normal goat serum before the incubation with antibodies and incubations with antibodies were made overnight at 4°C. 7.11 Densitometric analysis X-Ray films were scanned in gray scale at 300dpi with a Hpscanjet Iicx hardware (Hawlett Packard Company, Palo Alto, USA) and the digital image was submitted to densitometric analysis using Image J software (National Institute of Health, Washington, USA). The densitometric values represent the mean of the gray intensity of all the pixels present in a selected area. For normalization, a densitometric analysis is performed in a selected reference, e.g. cardiac actin content for standardization. 118 Chapter 7 Material and methods 7.12 Binucleation Nuclei were stained with 4, 6-diamidino-2 phenylindole-2 HCl (DAPI). The percentage of mononucleated and binucleated cells was counted from a sample of 200 isolated myocytes from 2 individual sets using confocal microscopy images. 7.13 Statistical analysis All statistical analyses and tests were carried out using Excel software (Microsoft, Redmond, USA). Data are given as mean +/- standard deviation. Bars in the graphs represent standard errors and differences analysed with a two-tailed T test with a P value below 0.05 were considered significant. 7.14 Hypertrophic samples Hypertension induced one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) mouse heart and sham operated mouse heart (Wiesel et al., 1997), isoproterenol treated and its control mouse heart, angiotensin II transgenic mouse heart alone and treated with isoproterenol (Mazzolai et al., 1998) were provided by Prof. Thierry Pedrazzini (Division of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine, University of Lausanne Medical School, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland). Dahl salt resistant rats (DR), sensitive (DS) and DS rats treated with Y-27632 heart extracts (Satoh et al., 2003) were a kind gift from Prof. Shinji Satoh (Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University, Japan). 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Ahuja, P., Perriard, E., Perriard, J.C., Ehler, E (2004). “Sequential myofibrillar breakdown accompanies mitotic division of mammalian cardiomyocytes”. Journal of Cell Science, 117(15): 3295-3306. Feng, J., Lucchinetti, E., Ahuja, P., Pasch, T., Perriard, J.C., Zaugg, M., (2005). “Isoflurane postconditioning prevents opening of the mitochondrial permeability transtion pore through inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3β. Anesthesiology, 103(5): 987-95. Ahuja, P., Perriard, E., Trimble, W., Perriard, J.C., Ehler, E (2006). “Probing the role of septins in cardiomyocytes”. Experimental Cell Research. Ahuja, P., Perriard, E., Perriard, J.C., Ehler, E. “Analysis of the cytokinetic potential of cardiomyocytes during development and disease ”. In Preparation. Krishnan, J., Ahuja, P., Bodenmann, S., Knapik, D., Turnbull, D.H., Gassmann, M., Perriard, J.C. “Cardiac Development is driven by Hypoxia Inducible Factor 1a (HIF-1α)”. In Preparation. 144 CURRICULUM VITAE Preeti Ahuja Born on March 11th, 1975 in New Delhi Citizen of India 2002-2006 Ph.D thesis at the Institute of Cell Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich, Switzerland 2001-2002 Research associate, Genetic Analysis Laboratory, Applied Biosystems (ABI), LABINDIA, New Delhi 1999-2001 Microbiologist, Research and Development, J. Mitra and Company, New Delhi, India 1996-1998 Masters degree with honors in Microbiology from the Punjab University, Chandigarh, India 1993-1996 Bachelors degree with honors in Microbiology from the University of Delhi, Delhi, India 1991-1993 High school in Delhi, India 1990-1991 Secondary school in Delhi, India 1981-1990 Primary school in Delhi, India 145