Cells and gene expression programs in the adult human heart

Monika Litviňuková(Max Delbrück Center), Carlos Talavera‐López(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Henrike Maatz(Max Delbrück Center), Daniel Reichart(Harvard University), Catherine L. Worth(Max Delbrück Center), Eric L. Lindberg(Max Delbrück Center), Masatoshi Kanda(Sapporo Medical University), Krzysztof Polański(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Eirini S. Fasouli(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Sara Samari(British Heart Foundation), Kenny Roberts(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Elizabeth Tuck(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Matthias Heinig(Technical University of Munich), Daniel M. DeLaughter(Harvard University), Barbara McDonough(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Hiroko Wakimoto(Harvard University), Joshua Gorham(Harvard University), Emily R. Nadelmann(Harvard University), Krishnaa T. Mahbubani(University of Cambridge), Kourosh Saeb‐Parsy(University of Cambridge), Giannino Patone(Max Delbrück Center), Joseph J. Boyle(Imperial College London), Hongbo Zhang(University of Alberta), Hao Zhang(University of Alberta), Anissa Viveiros(University of Alberta), Gavin Y. Oudit(University of Alberta), Omer Ali Bayraktar(Wellcome Sanger Institute), J.G. Seidman(Harvard University), Christine E. Seidman(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Michela Noseda(British Heart Foundation), Norbert Hübner(Max Delbrück Center), Sarah A. Teichmann(University of Cambridge)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
April 5, 2020
Cited by 20Open Access
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Abstract

Summary Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. Advanced insights into disease mechanisms and strategies to improve therapeutic opportunities require deeper understanding of the molecular processes of the normal heart. Knowledge of the full repertoire of cardiac cells and their gene expression profiles is a fundamental first step in this endeavor. Here, using large-scale single cell and nuclei transcriptomic profiling together with state-of-the-art analytical techniques, we characterise the adult human heart cellular landscape covering six anatomical cardiac regions (left and right atria and ventricles, apex and interventricular septum). Our results highlight the cellular heterogeneity of cardiomyocytes, pericytes and fibroblasts, revealing distinct subsets in the atria and ventricles indicative of diverse developmental origins and specialized properties. Further we define the complexity of the cardiac vascular network which includes clusters of arterial, capillary, venous, lymphatic endothelial cells and an atrial-enriched population. By comparing cardiac cells to skeletal muscle and kidney, we identify cardiac tissue resident macrophage subsets with transcriptional signatures indicative of both inflammatory and reparative phenotypes. Further, inference of cell-cell interactions highlight a macrophage-fibroblast-cardiomyocyte network that differs between atria and ventricles, and compared to skeletal muscle. We expect this reference human cardiac cell atlas to advance mechanistic studies of heart homeostasis and disease.


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