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Browsing by Author "Yan, Jianyun"

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    Author Correction: REST regulates the cell cycle for cardiac development and regeneration
    (Springer Nature, 2018-01-12) Zhang, Donghong; Wang, Yidong; Lu, Pengfei; Wang, Ping; Yuan, Xinchun; Yan, Jianyun; Cai, Chenleng; Chang, Ching-Pin; Zheng, Deyou; Wu, Bingruo; Zhou, Bin; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Despite the importance of cardiomyocyte proliferation in cardiac development and regeneration, the mechanisms that promote cardiomyocyte cell cycle remain incompletely understood. RE1 silencing transcription factor (REST) is a transcriptional repressor of neuronal genes. Here we show that REST also regulates the cardiomyocyte cell cycle. REST binds and represses the cell cycle inhibitor gene p21 and is required for mouse cardiac development and regeneration. Rest deletion de-represses p21 and inhibits the cardiomyocyte cell cycle and proliferation in embryonic or regenerating hearts. By contrast, REST overexpression in cultured cardiomyocytes represses p21 and increases proliferation. We further show that p21 knockout rescues cardiomyocyte cell cycle and proliferation defects resulting from Rest deletion. Our study reveals a REST-p21 regulatory axis as a mechanism for cell cycle progression in cardiomyocytes, which might be exploited therapeutically to enhance cardiac regeneration.
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    Cardiac Sca-1+ cells are not intrinsic stem cells for myocardial development, renewal and repair
    (American Heart Association, 2018-12-18) Zhang, Lu; Sultana, Nishat; Yan, Jianyun; Yang, Fan; Chen, Fuxue; Chepurko, Elena; Yang, Feng-Chun; Du, Qinghua; Zangi, Lior; Xu, Mingjiang; Bu, Lei; Cai, Chen-Leng; Pediatrics, School of Medicine
    Background: For over a decade, Sca-1+ cells within the mouse heart have been widely recognized as a stem cell population with multipotency that can give rise to cardiomyocytes, endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells in vitro and after cardiac grafting. However, the developmental origin and authentic nature of these cells remain elusive. Methods: Here, we used a series of high-fidelity genetic mouse models to characterize the identity and regenerative potential of cardiac resident Sca-1+ cells. Results: With these novel genetic mouse models, we found that Sca-1 does not label cardiac precursor cells during early embryonic heart formation. Postnatal cardiac resident Sca-1+ cells are in fact a pure endothelial cell population. They retain endothelial properties and exhibit minimal cardiomyogenic potential during development, normal aging and upon ischemic injury. Conclusions: Our study provides definitive insights into the nature of cardiac resident Sca-1+ cells. The observations challenge the current dogma that cardiac resident Sca-1+ cells are intrinsic stem cells for myocardial development, renewal and repair and suggest that the mechanisms of transplanted Sca-1+ cells in heart repair need to be reassessed.
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    Limited Regeneration Potential with Minimal Epicardial Progenitor Conversions in the Neonatal Mouse Heart after Injury
    (Elsevier, 2019-07-02) Cai, Weibin; Tan, Jing; Yan, Jianyun; Zhang, Lu; Cai, Xiaoqiang; Wang, Haiping; Liu, Fang; Ye, Maoqing; Cai, Chen-Leng; Pediatrics, School of Medicine
    The regeneration capacity of neonatal mouse heart is controversial. In addition, whether epicardial cells provide a progenitor pool for de novo heart regeneration is incompletely defined. Following apical resection of the neonatal mouse heart, we observed limited regeneration potential. Fate-mapping of Tbx18MerCreMer mice revealed that newly formed coronary vessels and a limited number of cardiomyocytes were derived from the T-box transcription factor 18 (Tbx18) lineage. However, further lineage tracing with SM-MHCCreERT2 and Nfactc1Cre mice revealed that the new smooth muscle and endothelial cells are in fact derivatives of pre-existing coronary vessels. Our data show that neonatal mouse heart can regenerate but that its potential is limited. Moreover, although epicardial cells are multipotent during embryogenesis, their contribution to heart repair through "stem" or "progenitor" cell conversion is minimal after birth. These observations suggest that early embryonic heart development and postnatal heart regeneration are distinct biological processes. Multipotency of epicardial cells is significantly decreased after birth.
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    REST regulates the cell cycle for cardiac development and regeneration
    (Nature Publishing group, 2017-12-07) Zhang, Donghong; Wang, Yidong; Lu, Pengfei; Wang, Ping; Yuan, Xinchun; Yan, Jianyun; Cai, Chenleng; Chang, Ching-Pin; Zheng, Deyou; Wu, Bingruo; Zhou, Bin; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Despite the importance of cardiomyocyte proliferation in cardiac development and regeneration, the mechanisms that promote cardiomyocyte cell cycle remain incompletely understood. RE1 silencing transcription factor (REST) is a transcriptional repressor of neuronal genes. Here we show that REST also regulates the cardiomyocyte cell cycle. REST binds and represses the cell cycle inhibitor gene p21 and is required for mouse cardiac development and regeneration. Rest deletion de-represses p21 and inhibits the cardiomyocyte cell cycle and proliferation in embryonic or regenerating hearts. By contrast, REST overexpression in cultured cardiomyocytes represses p21 and increases proliferation. We further show that p21 knockout rescues cardiomyocyte cell cycle and proliferation defects resulting from Rest deletion. Our study reveals a REST-p21 regulatory axis as a mechanism for cell cycle progression in cardiomyocytes, which might be exploited therapeutically to enhance cardiac regeneration., The mechanisms regulating cardiomyocyte proliferation during development and cardiac regeneration are incompletely understood. The authors show that the transcription factor REST regulates cardiomyocyte proliferation by binding and repressing the cell cycle inhibitor p21.
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    Retraction Note: REST regulates the cell cycle for cardiac development and regeneration
    (Springer Nature, 2024-02-22) Zhang, Donghong; Wang, Yidong; Lu, Pengfei; Wang, Ping; Yuan, Xinchun; Yan, Jianyun; Cai, Chenleng; Chang, Ching-Pin; Zheng, Deyou; Wu, Bingruo; Zhou, Bin; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Retraction to: Nature Communications 10.1038/s41467-017-02210-y, published online 07 December 2017 The authors have retracted this article because of significant concerns regarding a number of figures presented in this work that question the integrity of the data. After publication, several concerns were raised about the figures in this article. Specifically, * There appears to be a partial overlap between two panels of Figure 4e (bottom left corner for p21KO and top right for DKO). * There appears to be an overlap between a control panel from figure 2k and Rest imKO in Figure 5g (PH3 staining). * There appears to be image reuse between two samples in Figure 5g in the Aurora B staining row for Rest imKO and p21KO. * There appears to be an overlap between Figure 6f Ph3 staining for the Rest cDNA sample and Supplementary Fig. 6e, EdU staining, Rest cDNA, with fewer arrows and less visible DAPI staining. All authors agree with this retraction.
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