Development of the arterial roots and ventricular outflow tracts

Author:

Anderson Robert H.1ORCID,Lamers Wouter H.2ORCID,Hikspoors Jill P. J. M.2,Mohun Timothy J.3,Bamforth Simon D.1,Chaudhry Bill1ORCID,Eley Lorraine1,Kerwin Janet1,Crosier Moira1,Henderson Deborah J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biosciences Institute Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

2. Department of Anatomy & Embryology Maastricht University Maastricht The Netherlands

3. Crick Institute London UK

Abstract

AbstractThe separation of the outflow tract of the developing heart into the systemic and pulmonary arterial channels remains controversial and poorly understood. The definitive outflow tracts have three components. The developing outflow tract, in contrast, has usually been described in two parts. When the tract has exclusively myocardial walls, such bipartite description is justified, with an obvious dogleg bend separating proximal and distal components. With the addition of non‐myocardial walls distally, it becomes possible to recognise three parts. The middle part, which initially still has myocardial walls, contains within its lumen a pair of intercalated valvar swellings. The swellings interdigitate with the distal ends of major outflow cushions, formed by the remodelling of cardiac jelly, to form the primordiums of the arterial roots. The proximal parts of the major cushions, occupying the proximal part of the outflow tract, which also has myocardial walls, themselves fuse and muscularise. The myocardial shelf thus formed remodels to become the free‐standing subpulmonary infundibulum. Details of all these processes are currently lacking. In this account, we describe the anatomical changes seen during the overall remodelling. Our interpretations are based on the interrogation of serially sectioned histological and high‐resolution episcopic microscopy datasets prepared from developing human and mouse embryos, with some of the datasets processed and reconstructed to reveal the specific nature of the tissues contributing to the separation of the outflow channels. Our findings confirm that the tripartite postnatal arrangement can be correlated with the changes occurring during development.

Funder

British Heart Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Anatomy

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