Revisiting Cardiac Cellular Composition

Author:

Pinto Alexander R.1,Ilinykh Alexei1,Ivey Malina J.1,Kuwabara Jill T.1,D’Antoni Michelle L.1,Debuque Ryan1,Chandran Anjana1,Wang Lina1,Arora Komal1,Rosenthal Nadia A.1,Tallquist Michelle D.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (A.R.P., A.I., R.D., A.C., L.W., N.R.); Department of Medicine, Center for Cardiovascular Research (M.J.I., J.T.K., M.L.D’A., K.A., M.D.T.) and Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology (M.J.I., J.T.K.), University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI; National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom (N.A.R.); and The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME (N.A.R.).

Abstract

Rationale: Accurate knowledge of the cellular composition of the heart is essential to fully understand the changes that occur during pathogenesis and to devise strategies for tissue engineering and regeneration. Objective: To examine the relative frequency of cardiac endothelial cells, hematopoietic-derived cells, and fibroblasts in the mouse and human heart. Methods and Results: Using a combination of genetic tools and cellular markers, we examined the occurrence of the most prominent cell types in the adult mouse heart. Immunohistochemistry revealed that endothelial cells constitute >60%, hematopoietic-derived cells 5% to 10%, and fibroblasts <20% of the nonmyocytes in the heart. A refined cell isolation protocol and an improved flow cytometry approach provided an independent means of determining the relative abundance of nonmyocytes. High-dimensional analysis and unsupervised clustering of cell populations confirmed that endothelial cells are the most abundant cell population. Interestingly, fibroblast numbers are smaller than previously estimated, and 2 commonly assigned fibroblast markers, Sca-1 and CD90, under-represent fibroblast numbers. We also describe an alternative fibroblast surface marker that more accurately identifies the resident cardiac fibroblast population. Conclusions: This new perspective on the abundance of different cell types in the heart demonstrates that fibroblasts comprise a relatively minor population. By contrast, endothelial cells constitute the majority of noncardiomyocytes and are likely to play a greater role in physiological function and response to injury than previously appreciated.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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