A recent study published in
Genes & Diseases by researchers from Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine investigated the role of Dlc1 in cardiac progenitor differentiation by constructing a
Dlc1 knockout mESC (mouse embryonic stem cell) monoclonal cell line using CRISPR/Cas9 to mimic cardiomyocyte differentiation.
Initial analysis revealed that Dlc1 was mainly expressed in the myocardium and endocardium, and its expression was down-regulated during the specification of the gastrulating mesoderm, and up-regulated during the differentiation of cardiac progenitors, suggesting that Dlc1 was involved in the differentiation of cardiac progenitor cells.
Using the CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing technique, the authors constructed three different
Dlc1-knockout Nkx2.5-emGFP mESC cell lines that label cardiac progenitors and selected cell line 2 for further investigations. Additional experiments and RNA sequencing revealed that
Dlc1 deficiency: i) promotes the differentiation and accumulation of cardiac progenitors, affecting subsequent cardiomyocyte lineage specification, and ii) promotes mesodermal or endodermal cell specification, causing the accumulation of cardiac progenitors but perturbs their further differentiation into cardiomyocytes.
Previous studies have shown that the DLC1 protein regulates multiple development-related signaling pathways, EGFR/Akt/NF-κB, Wnt/β-catenin, and RhoA/ROCK, of which WNT signaling is critical during mesoderm formation and late cardiac progenitor specification — processes essential for myocardial cell differentiation.
Bioinformatics analyses and rescue experiments using the Wnt pathway inhibitor XAV-939 showed that
Dlc1 knockdown promotes mesoderm specification by activating canonical Wnt signaling, thereby enhancing cardiac progenitor differentiation. Mechanistically,
Dlc1 knockdown activates the canonical Wnt pathway by reducing β-catenin degradation and promoting its nuclear translocation.
Collectively, the results of this study show that Dlc1 expression changes dynamically during mESC differentiation into cardiomyocytes. Furthermore,
Dlc1 deficiency promotes mesoderm lineage specification by activating canonical Wnt signaling, leading to the accumulation of cardiac progenitors and blocking their further differentiation into cardiomyocytes, thus identifying a new candidate gene in cardiomyocyte differentiation.
Reference
Title of the original paper: Dlc1 deletion activates the canonical Wnt pathway at an early stage and affects subsequent cardiac differentiation in mouse embryonic stem cells
Journal
Genes & Diseases
Genes & Diseases is a journal for molecular and translational medicine. The journal primarily focuses on publishing investigations on the molecular bases and experimental therapeutics of human diseases. Publication formats include full length research article, review article, short communication, correspondence, perspectives, commentary, views on news, and research watch.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gendis.2025.101844
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Genes & Diseases publishes rigorously peer-reviewed and high quality original articles and authoritative reviews that focus on the molecular bases of human diseases. Emphasis is placed on hypothesis-driven, mechanistic studies relevant to pathogenesis and/or experimental therapeutics of human diseases. The journal has worldwide authorship, and a broad scope in basic and translational biomedical research of molecular biology, molecular genetics, and cell biology, including but not limited to cell proliferation and apoptosis, signal transduction, stem cell biology, developmental biology, gene regulation and epigenetics, cancer biology, immunity and infection, neuroscience, disease-specific animal models, gene and cell-based therapies, and regenerative medicine.
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