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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Blood flow dynamics of one cardiac cycle and relationship to mechanotransduction and trabeculation during heart looping

TLDR
The combined dynamic and imaging data show the developing structural capacity to accommodate increasing flow and the mechanotransducing networks that organize to effectively facilitate formation of the trabeculated four-chambered heart.
Abstract
Analyses of form-function relationships during heart looping are directly related to technological advances. Recent advances in four-dimensional optical coherence tomography (OCT) permit observations of cardiac dynamics at high-speed acquisition rates and high resolution. Real-time observation of the avian stage 13 looping heart reveals that interactions between the endocardial and myocardial compartments are more complex than previously depicted. Here we applied four-dimensional OCT to elucidate the relationships of the endocardium, myocardium, and cardiac jelly compartments in a single cardiac cycle during looping. Six cardiac levels along the longitudinal heart tube were each analyzed at 15 time points from diastole to systole. Using image analyses, the organization of mechanotransducing molecules, fibronectin, tenascin C, α-tubulin, and nonmuscle myosin II was correlated with specific cardiac regions defined by OCT data. Optical coherence microscopy helped to visualize details of cardiac architectural development in the embryonic mouse heart. Throughout the cardiac cycle, the endocardium was consistently oriented between the midline of the ventral floor of the foregut and the outer curvature of the myocardial wall, with multiple endocardial folds allowing high-volume capacities during filling. The cardiac area fractional shortening is much higher than previously published. The in vivo profile captured by OCT revealed an interaction of the looping heart with the extra-embryonic splanchnopleural membrane providing outside-in information. In summary, the combined dynamic and imaging data show the developing structural capacity to accommodate increasing flow and the mechanotransducing networks that organize to effectively facilitate formation of the trabeculated four-chambered heart.

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High-resolution reconstruction of the beating zebrafish heart

TL;DR: These tools based on high-speed selective plane illumination microscopy (SPIM) offer pristine views into the beating zebrafish heart, capturing three-dimensional cardiac dynamics with postacquisition synchronization of multiview movie stacks and obtaining static high-resolution reconstructions by briefly stopping the heart with optogenetics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Embryonic cardiac chamber maturation: Trabeculation, conduction, and cardiomyocyte proliferation.

TL;DR: Evidence is highlighted suggesting that a wide variety of basic signaling pathways and biomechanical forces are involved in cardiac wall maturation, and much remains unknown about the complex biomolecular mechanisms governing chamber maturation.
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Interplay between cardiac function and heart development

TL;DR: Some of the recent advances in the understanding of how mechanical forces influence cardiac development are reviewed, with a focus on fluid flow forces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanics of early cardiac development

TL;DR: Imaging and modeling approaches, used in combination with biological data on cell behavior and adaptation, are paving the road for new discoveries on links between biomechanics and biology and their effect on cardiac development and fetal programming.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A series of normal stages in the development of the chick embryo

TL;DR: The preparation of a series of normal stages of the chick embryo does not need justification at a time when chick ernbryos are not only widely used in descriptive and experimental embryology but are proving to be increasingly valuable in medical research, as in work on viruses and cancer.
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A series of normal stages in the development of the chick embryo

TL;DR: In this article, a series of normal stages of the chick embryo is described in terms of the length of time of incubation, except for the first three days during which more detailed characteristics such as the number of somites are applied.
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Intracardiac fluid forces are an essential epigenetic factor for embryonic cardiogenesis

TL;DR: In vivo imaging is shown to show the presence of high-shear, vortical flow at two key stages in the developing heart, and predict flow-induced forces much greater than might have been expected for micro-scale structures at low Reynolds numbers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical coherence microscopy in scattering media.

TL;DR: In this article, a novel technique, based on optical coherence tomography, was described for enhanced optical sectioning in confocal microscopy, which was demonstrated and compared with the predictions of a single-backscatter theory.
Journal Article

Optical coherence microscopy in scattering media

TL;DR: A novel technique, based on optical coherence tomography, is described, for enhanced optical sectioning in confocal microscopy, which is demonstrated and compared with the predictions of a single-backscatter theory.
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