Redox Biology (Jan 2014)

Zebrafish heart development is regulated via glutaredoxin 2 dependent migration and survival of neural crest cells

  • Carsten Berndt,
  • Gereon Poschmann,
  • Kai Stühler,
  • Arne Holmgren,
  • Lars Bräutigam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2014.04.012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. C
pp. 673 – 678

Abstract

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Glutaredoxin 2 is a vertebrate specific oxidoreductase of the thioredoxin family of proteins modulating the intracellular thiol pool. Thereby, glutaredoxin 2 is important for specific redox signaling and regulates embryonic development of brain and vasculature via reversible oxidative posttranslational thiol modifications. Here, we describe that glutaredoxin 2 is also required for successful heart formation. Knock-down of glutaredoxin 2 in zebrafish embryos inhibits the invasion of cardiac neural crest cells into the primary heart field. This leads to impaired heart looping and subsequent obstructed blood flow. Glutaredoxin 2 specificity of the observed phenotype was confirmed by rescue experiments. Active site variants of glutaredoxin 2 revealed that the (de)-glutathionylation activity is required for proper heart formation. Our data suggest that actin might be one target during glutaredoxin 2 regulated cardiac neural crest cell migration and embryonic heart development. In summary, this work represents further evidence for the general importance of redox signaling in embryonic development and highlights additionally the importance of glutaredoxin 2 during embryogenesis.

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