Stem Cell Research (Jan 2014)

Angiomodulin is required for cardiogenesis of embryonic stem cells and is maintained by a feedback loop network of p63 and Activin-A

  • Zohar Wolchinsky,
  • Shoham Shivtiel,
  • Evelyn Nathalie Kouwenhoven,
  • Daria Putin,
  • Eli Sprecher,
  • Huiqing Zhou,
  • Matthieu Rouleau,
  • Daniel Aberdam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scr.2013.09.015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 49 – 59

Abstract

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The transcription factor p63, member of the p53 gene family, encodes for two main isoforms, TAp63 and ΔNp63 with distinct functions on epithelial homeostasis and cancer. Recently, we discovered that TAp63 is essential for in vitro cardiogenesis and heart development in vivo. TAp63 is expressed by embryonic endoderm and acts on cardiac progenitors by a cell-non-autonomous manner. In the present study, we search for cardiogenic secreted factors that could be regulated by TAp63 and, by ChIP-seq analysis, identified Angiomodulin (AGM), also named IGFBP7 or IGFBP-rP1. We demonstrate that AGM is necessary for cardiac commitment of embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and its regulation depends on TAp63 isoform. TAp63 directly activates both AGM and Activin-A during ESC cardiogenesis while these secreted factors modulate TAp63 gene expression by a feedback loop mechanism. The molecular circuitry controlled by TAp63 on AGM/Activin-A signaling pathway and thus on cardiogenesis emphasizes the importance of p63 during early cardiac development.