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Publication : Hepatocyte growth factor and its receptor are expressed in cardiac myocytes during early cardiogenesis.

First Author  Rappolee DA Year  1996
Journal  Circ Res Volume  78
Issue  6 Pages  1028-36
PubMed ID  8635233 Mgi Jnum  J:34854
Mgi Id  MGI:82311 Doi  10.1161/01.res.78.6.1028
Citation  Rappolee DA, et al. (1996) Hepatocyte growth factor and its receptor are expressed in cardiac myocytes during early cardiogenesis. Circ Res 78(6):1028-36
abstractText  In the mouse, the heart primordium arises when mesoderm is set aside during gastrulation, is induced by pharyngeal endoderm, migrates ventrally to the midline of the embryo, forms a tube, and begins beating. Little is known of the molecular mechanisms that mediate the determination, mitosis, differentiation, and migration that lead to the beating heart. Transcripts for hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF) and its receptor are coexpressed transiently and dynamically in the premyocardium but not in other heart progenitor cells. Transcripts the HGF ligand and receptor are first detected before cardiac function and looping and persist through the first looping stage, when heart morphology begins to elaborate. HGF ligand and receptor mRNA are detectable after the putative heart transcription factor, Csx/Nkx2-5, and concomitantly with the heart structural gene, cardiac actin. HGF receptor mRNA is detected in the mesoderm of the headfold stage and persists in myocardial precursors of the ventricles and atria (but not in the outflow-tract smooth muscle cells) through the 14-somite stage at approximately 8.75 days after fertilization (day E8.75). At the headfold stage, between E7.5 and E8.0, HGF receptor mRNA was detected in myocardial cells before fusion at the ventral midline. HGF ligand and receptor mRNA transcripts are coexpressed in the embryo, except in the headfold state (when only the HGF receptor can be detected) and in the heart at the 14- to 18-somite stage (when only HGF ligand can be detected). The dynamic pattern of coexpression suggests an autoregulatory role for HGF and its receptor in early heart development.
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