Long-term, in toto live imaging of cardiomyocyte behaviour during mouse ventricle chamber formation at single-cell resolution

  • Yanzhu Yue
  • , Weijian Zong
  • , Xin Li
  • , Jinghang Li
  • , Youdong Zhang
  • , Runlong Wu
  • , Yazui Liu
  • , Jiahao Cui
  • , Qianhao Wang
  • , Yunkun Bian
  • , Xianhong Yu
  • , Yao Liu
  • , Guangming Tan
  • , Yunfeng Zhang
  • , Gang Zhao
  • , Bin Zhou
  • , Liangyi Chen
  • , Wenlei Xiao
  • , Heping Cheng*
  • , Aibin He
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Mapping of the holistic cell behaviours sculpting the four-chambered mammalian heart has been a goal or previous studies, but so far only success in transparent invertebrates and lower vertebrates with two-chambered hearts has been achieved. Using a live-imaging system comprising a customized vertical light-sheet microscope equipped with a mouse embryo culture module, a heartbeat-gated imaging strategy and a digital image processing framework, we realized volumetric imaging of developing mouse hearts at single-cell resolution and with uninterrupted cell lineages for up to 1.5 d. Four-dimensional landscapes of Nppa+ cardiomyocyte cell behaviours revealed a blueprint for ventricle chamber formation by which biased outward migration of the outermost cardiomyocytes is coupled with cell intercalation and horizontal division. The inner-muscle architecture of trabeculae was developed through dual mechanisms: early fate segregation and transmural cell arrangement involving both oriented cell division and directional migration. Thus, live-imaging reconstruction of uninterrupted cell lineages affords a transformative means for deciphering mammalian organogenesis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)332-340
Number of pages9
JournalNature Cell Biology
Volume22
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2020

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