Normal heart development requires appropriate levels of retinoic acid (RA) signaling. RA levels in embryos are dampened by Cyp26 enzymes, which metabolize RA into easily degraded derivatives. Loss of Cyp26 function in humans is associated with numerous developmental syndromes that include cardiovascular defects. Although previous studies have shown that Cyp26-deficient vertebrate models also have cardiovascular defects, the mechanisms underlying these defects are not understood. Here, we found that in zebrafish, two Cyp26 enzymes, Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1, are expressed in the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (ALPM) and predominantly overlap with vascular progenitors (VPs). Although singular knockdown of Cyp26a1 or Cyp26c1 does not overtly affect cardiovascular development, double Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 (referred to here as Cyp26)-deficient embryos have increased atrial cells and reduced cranial vasculature cells. Examining the ALPM using lineage tracing indicated that in Cyp26-deficient embryos the myocardial progenitor field contains excess atrial progenitors and is shifted anteriorly into a region that normally solely gives rise to VPs. Although Cyp26 expression partially overlaps with VPs in the ALPM, we found that Cyp26 enzymes largely act cell non-autonomously to promote appropriate cardiovascular development. Our results suggest that localized expression of Cyp26 enzymes cell non-autonomously defines the boundaries between the cardiac and VP fields within the ALPM through regulating RA levels, which ensures a proper balance of myocardial and endothelial lineages. Our study provides novel insight into the earliest consequences of Cyp26 deficiency that underlie cardiovascular malformations in vertebrate embryos.

A balance of retinoic acid (RA) synthesis and degradation is necessary for appropriate organogenesis (Otto et al., 2003; Uehara et al., 2007; White et al., 2007; Niederreither and Dolle, 2008). In all vertebrate embryos, a disruption of this balance, through excess vitamin A (retinol) or RA, causes RA embryopathies (Lammer et al., 1985; Pan and Baker, 2007), which have characteristic malformations of the heart, thymus, central nervous system and craniofacial structures. The necessity to limit endogenous embryonic RA levels illustrates the importance of Cyp26 enzymes, which are members of the p450 family of proteins that promote the degradation of RA (White et al., 1997; Abu-Abed et al., 2001; Otto et al., 2003). In humans, Cyp26 deficiency has been implicated in several developmental syndromes, most notably DiGeorge syndrome, Kippel Feil's anomaly and Antley Bixler syndrome (Fukami et al., 2010; Pennimpede et al., 2010). Therefore, elucidating the requirements of Cyp26 enzymes during vertebrate development will provide greater understanding of the mechanisms underlying congenital defects found in human syndromes.

Vertebrates have three conserved Cyp26 paralogs: Cyp26a1, Cyp26b1 and Cyp26c1. Cyp26a1 is the earliest and most broadly expressed during embryogenesis in all vertebrates, with expression in the anterior and posterior of the embryos (Abu-Abed et al., 2002; Kudoh et al., 2002; Dobbs-McAuliffe et al., 2004; Emoto et al., 2005). In both mice and zebrafish, Cyp26a1-deficient embryos have conserved hindbrain, limb and posterior trunk and tail defects (Abu-Abed et al., 2001; Niederreither et al., 2002; Emoto et al., 2005). All three Cyp26 enzymes are expressed in the hindbrain during early development of vertebrates. Although Cyp26a1 deficiency alone results in patterning defects that are not observed in Cyp26b1- and Cyp26c1-deficient embryos, there is functional redundancy between these enzymes during early embryogenesis. Double-deficient Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 and triple Cyp26a1-, Cyp26b1- and Cyp26c1-deficient mice and zebrafish have progressively more severe hindbrain defects than Cyp26a1 deficiency alone (Kudoh et al., 2002; Emoto et al., 2005; Hernandez et al., 2007; Uehara et al., 2007,, 2009). Specifically, progressive loss of Cyp26 alleles causes an expansion of posterior rhombomeres at the expense of more anterior rhombomeres, which is consistent with the teratogenic effects of RA treatment. Furthermore, the triple Cyp26-deficient mice die by E9.0 (Uehara et al., 2009), suggesting there are additional early embryonic defects.

Although a primary focus of understanding the consequences of Cyp26 deficiency has been neural development, as with RA treatment, loss of Cyp26 enzymes affects numerous organs, including the heart. During early development, the heart is particularly sensitive to excess RA signaling, with surplus Vitamin A and RA being teratogenic (Lammer et al., 1985; Osmond et al., 1991; Waxman and Yelon, 2009). Specifically, RA treatment causes similar overt malformations of the atrial and ventricular chambers in all vertebrates examined. Despite a long history examining the teratogenic consequences of surplus RA, we still do not have a clear understanding of the mechanisms underlying RA induced chamber malformations. Furthermore, although previous studies in mice and zebrafish have suggested that in Cyp26-deficient embryos there are gross cardiac malformations, including looping defects (Abu-Abed et al., 2001; Emoto et al., 2005; Ribes et al., 2007), the nature of these defects was not analyzed in detail. Therefore, the consequences of increased endogenous RA levels due to loss of Cyp26 enzymes in early cardiac development are not currently understood.

In this paper, we sought to understand the earliest consequences of Cyp26 deficiency on the cardiovascular field in vertebrate embryos. Here, using zebrafish, we demonstrate that Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 act redundantly to pattern the cardiovascular progenitor fields within the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (ALPM). Specifically, we found deficiency of both Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 causes shifts in the ALPM boundaries of the anterior vascular and myocardial progenitor fields. The consequences of these shifts are decreased endothelial cells and a specific expansion of atrial cardiomyocytes, suggesting there is a fate transformation between these two cardiovascular progenitor types in the nascent ALPM. Furthermore, we show that the Cyp26 enzymes are required cell non-autonomously within the ALPM, indicating that Cyp26 enzymes are required within a community of ALPM cells to restrict RA levels required for proper patterning of the cardiovascular progenitor fields. Therefore, our study provides novel insight into the earliest requirements of Cyp26 enzymes in cardiovascular development, suggesting that they are required to limit RA signaling that balances the sizes of the atrial and VP fields.

Cyp26 enzyme expression in the ALPM

To understand the relationship of Cyp26 enzyme expression to cardiovascular progenitors in the ALPM, we used two-color in situ hybridization (ISH). We found that both cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 are expressed in the ALPM at the 8-somite (s) stage (Fig. 1), consistent with previous studies (Dobbs-McAuliffe et al., 2004; Zhao et al., 2005; Hernandez et al., 2007). Although the expression patterns within the ALPM differ slightly, the posterior limits of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression only marginally overlap with the anterior limit of the cardiac progenitor (CP) marker nkx2.5 (Fig. 1A-B′). By contrast, both cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 predominantly overlap with the more anterior early VP marker etv2 (Fig. 1C-D′). We did not examine cyp26b1 because previous studies demonstrated it is expressed solely in the hindbrain at this stage (Zhao et al., 2005). Therefore, the expression patterns of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 within the ALPM suggest they are closely associated with both types of cardiovascular progenitors.

Fig. 1.

Cyp26 expression partially overlaps with cardiovascular progenitors. (A-B′) Whole-mount double in situ hybridization of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression (red) relative to nkx2.5 (blue) in wild-type embryos at 8 s. (C-D′) cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression relative to etv2 (blue) in wild-type embryos at 8 s. A′-D′ correspond to boxed areas in A-D, respectively. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Black arrows in A′-D′ indicate cells with overlapping expression. White arrows in C′ and D′ indicate cells without overlapping expression.

Fig. 1.

Cyp26 expression partially overlaps with cardiovascular progenitors. (A-B′) Whole-mount double in situ hybridization of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression (red) relative to nkx2.5 (blue) in wild-type embryos at 8 s. (C-D′) cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression relative to etv2 (blue) in wild-type embryos at 8 s. A′-D′ correspond to boxed areas in A-D, respectively. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Black arrows in A′-D′ indicate cells with overlapping expression. White arrows in C′ and D′ indicate cells without overlapping expression.

Cyp26 depletion produces a specific increase in atrial cells

To determine the role that Cyp26 enzymes play in early cardiovascular development, we used previously characterized morpholino oligonucleotides (MOs) to knockdown the Cyp26 enzymes (Hernandez et al., 2007; D'Aniello et al., 2013). We also used the giraffe (gir) mutant, which contains a point mutation that causes a truncation in Cyp26a1 (Emoto et al., 2005). Using the characterized MOs and gir mutant, alone and in combination, we were able to replicate previously published hindbrain phenotypes (supplementary material Fig. S1A-F) (Hernandez et al., 2007). Furthermore, at 36 hours post-fertilization (hpf), singular knockdown of Cyp26a1 visibly recapitulates the gir mutant phenotype, while Cyp26c1-deficient embryos appear overtly normal (supplementary material Fig. S2A,C) (Hernandez et al., 2007; D'Aniello et al., 2013). Double knockdown of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 (referred to as Cyp26-deficient embryos) or injection of cyp26c1 MO into gir mutant embryos (referred to as gir+C) both caused more severe phenotypes, with larger pericardial edema and smaller heads compared with cyp26a1-deficient and gir embryos alone (supplementary material Fig. S2A-F). We also found that Cyp26-deficient embryos had increased GFP expression in the RA reporter line Tg(12XRARE-ef1a:EGFP)sk72 (supplementary material Fig. S3A-D) (Waxman and Yelon, 2011), suggesting there is increased RA signaling in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Therefore, we were significantly depleting Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 with these tools, and proceeded to analyze cardiovascular development.

We first examined expression of the cardiac differentiation markers myl7 (pan-cardiac), vmhc (ventricular) and amhc (atrial) in Cyp26-deficient embryos using ISH and RT-qPCR at the 20-22 s stages. Although myl7 will eventually be expressed in all cardiomyocytes, at this stage it predominantly marks ventricular cardiomyocytes (Yelon et al., 1999). Although myl7, vmhc and amhc were unchanged in singular knockdowns, we found that Cyp26-deficient embryos had expanded amhc expression (Fig. 2A-N). Similar increases in amhc expression without changes in myl7 or vmhc were also found in gir+C embryos (supplementary material Fig. S4A-L) and embryos treated with ketoconazole (Keto), which is a pharmacological inhibitor of cytochrome p450 enzymes (supplementary material Fig. S5A-G). Next, we determined whether the increase in amhc expression reflected an increase in atrial cardiomyocytes by depleting the Cyp26 enzymes from Tg(–5.1myl7:DsRed-NLS) embryos and counting the numbers of cardiomyocytes at 36 hpf. Although there was no overt difference in heart morphology at 36 hpf between control, singular and double-deficient embryos (supplementary material Fig. S6A-F), we found that Cyp26-deficient embryos had a significant increase in atrial cardiomyocytes (Fig. 2O), whereas singular knockdown of cyp26a1 or cyp26c1 did not affect cardiomyocyte number. Interestingly, the specific increase in atrial cells in Cyp26-deficient embryos is remarkably similar to the effects of modest increases in RA signaling (Waxman et al., 2008; Waxman and Yelon, 2009; D'Aniello et al., 2013). Therefore, our data demonstrate that depletion of both Cyp26 enzymes is required to produce a specific increase in atrial differentiation that is reminiscent of modest increases in RA signaling resulting from RA treatment.

Fig. 2.

Cyp26-deficient embryos have increased atrial differentiation and cell number. (A-L) Cardiac differentiation marker expression in wild-type, cyp26a1-deficient, cyp26c1-deficient and cyp26-deficient embryos. Singular knock down of cyp26a1 (D-F) or cyp26c1 (G-I) does not affect cardiac differentiation. Double knockdown (J-L) shows an expansion of amhc expression. (M) Area measurements indicate that amhc expression is expanded in Cyp26-deficient embryos. For myl7: WT, n=38; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=12; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=18; Cyp26-deficient, n=30. For vmhc: WT, n=40; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=19; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=16; Cyp26-deficient, n=37. For amhc: WT, n=33; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=17; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=17; Cyp26-deficient, n=41. (N) RT-qPCR indicates that only amhc expression is increased in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (O) Cardiomyocyte counts reveal a specific increase in atrial cells in Cyp26-deficient embryos at 36 hpf. WT, n=53; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=15; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=15; Cyp26 deficient, n=51. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Fig. 2.

Cyp26-deficient embryos have increased atrial differentiation and cell number. (A-L) Cardiac differentiation marker expression in wild-type, cyp26a1-deficient, cyp26c1-deficient and cyp26-deficient embryos. Singular knock down of cyp26a1 (D-F) or cyp26c1 (G-I) does not affect cardiac differentiation. Double knockdown (J-L) shows an expansion of amhc expression. (M) Area measurements indicate that amhc expression is expanded in Cyp26-deficient embryos. For myl7: WT, n=38; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=12; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=18; Cyp26-deficient, n=30. For vmhc: WT, n=40; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=19; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=16; Cyp26-deficient, n=37. For amhc: WT, n=33; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=17; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=17; Cyp26-deficient, n=41. (N) RT-qPCR indicates that only amhc expression is increased in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (O) Cardiomyocyte counts reveal a specific increase in atrial cells in Cyp26-deficient embryos at 36 hpf. WT, n=53; Cyp26a1-deficient, n=15; Cyp26c1-deficient, n=15; Cyp26 deficient, n=51. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to rostral shifts in the progenitor fields of the ALPM

Because we found an increase in atrial differentiation in Cyp26-deficient embryos, we wanted to determine how Cyp26 deficiency affects the CP pools in the ALPM. To examine this, we used ISH and RT-qPCR to examine CP markers at the 8 s stage. Unfortunately, at this time point we could not examine a specific effect on atrial progenitors, because there are currently no known atrial specific progenitor marker genes. Instead, we examined nkx2.5, which is primarily expressed in ventricular progenitors at 8 s, and hand2, which marks both atrial and ventricular progenitors (Schoenebeck et al., 2007). We found that in Cyp26-deficient embryos, both nkx2.5 and hand2 expression were shifted anteriorly (Fig. 3A-D), although their expression levels were relatively unchanged (Fig. 3M). These results suggest that loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to an anterior shift in the CPs within the ALPM.

Fig. 3.

ALPM progenitor markers are shifted anteriorly in Cyp26-deficient embryos.In situ hybridization of (A,B) nkx2.5, (C,D) hand2, (E,F) gata4, (G,H) etv2, (I,J) tal1 and (K,L) dhrs3a in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (A-D) There is an anterior shift in nkx2.5 and hand2 expression in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Arrows in A and C indicates distances between expression and posterior eye. Arrows in B and D indicate border between expression and posterior eye, which abut in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (E-J) gata4, etv2 and tal1 expression is truncated in Cyp26-deficient embryos compared with wild-type siblings. (K,L) dhrs3a expression is expanded in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Arrows indicate length of expression. The posterior boundaries of dhrs3a expression did not overtly change in control sibling and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (M) RT-qPCR of cardiovascular progenitor genes. Cyp26-deficient embryos have decreased gata4, etv2 and tal1 expression compared with wild-type siblings. (N) Total ALPM length is the same in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. For WT: n=22 (etv2), n=10 (nkx2.5), n=21 (dhrs3a). For Cyp26-deficient: n=17 (etv2), n=12 (nkx2.5), n=20 (dhrs3a). All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Fig. 3.

ALPM progenitor markers are shifted anteriorly in Cyp26-deficient embryos.In situ hybridization of (A,B) nkx2.5, (C,D) hand2, (E,F) gata4, (G,H) etv2, (I,J) tal1 and (K,L) dhrs3a in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (A-D) There is an anterior shift in nkx2.5 and hand2 expression in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Arrows in A and C indicates distances between expression and posterior eye. Arrows in B and D indicate border between expression and posterior eye, which abut in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (E-J) gata4, etv2 and tal1 expression is truncated in Cyp26-deficient embryos compared with wild-type siblings. (K,L) dhrs3a expression is expanded in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Arrows indicate length of expression. The posterior boundaries of dhrs3a expression did not overtly change in control sibling and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (M) RT-qPCR of cardiovascular progenitor genes. Cyp26-deficient embryos have decreased gata4, etv2 and tal1 expression compared with wild-type siblings. (N) Total ALPM length is the same in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. For WT: n=22 (etv2), n=10 (nkx2.5), n=21 (dhrs3a). For Cyp26-deficient: n=17 (etv2), n=12 (nkx2.5), n=20 (dhrs3a). All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

We next examined gata4 because it is expressed more broadly in both cardiac and VPs of the ALPM. Consistent with the anterior shift of nkx2.5 and hand2 expression, we found that in Cyp26-deficient embryos, gata4 expression was truncated, with the posterior boundary shifted anteriorly in the ALPM, and significantly decreased compared with wild-type siblings (Fig. 3E,F,M). Furthermore, gir+C-deficient and Keto-treated embryos exhibited a similar shift of nkx2.5 expression within the anterior ALPM, although gata4 was somewhat less affected in these embryos (supplementary material Fig. S7A-H and Fig. S8A-D). The anterior shift in the CPs and truncation of gata4 expression predicted that the VPs may also be truncated in Cyp26-deficient embryos. Consistent with this notion, we found that in Cyp26-deficient, gir+C-deficient and Keto-treated embryos the VP markers etv2 and tal1 were truncated within the ALPM at 8 s (Fig. 3G-J,M; supplementary material Fig. S7C,D,G,H,K,L,O,P and Fig. S8E-H), which correlated with decreased expression in Cyp26-deficient embryos (Fig. 3M). As etv2 marks both vascular and myeloid progenitors at this stage (Lee et al., 2008; Sumanas et al., 2008), we wanted to determine whether one or both these progenitor populations are affected in Cyp26-deficient embryos. We found that the amount of spi1b-expressing anterior myeloid progenitors, although shifted anteriorly, was not decreased in Cyp26-deficient embryos (supplementary material Fig. S9), suggesting that loss of etv2 and tal1 in Cyp26-deficient embryos reflects a loss in VPs.

Next, we wanted to understand whether the borders of the adjacent cardiac and VP fields remain distinct or were altered in Cyp26-deficient embryos. To determine this, we performed double ISH using probes for zsyellow and etv2 in Tg(nkx2.5:ZsYellow) embryos. These experiments were carried out using Tg(nkx2.5:ZsYellow) embryos because more robust two-color ISH was able to be achieved with a zsyellow probe relative to nkx2.5. In wild-type embryos, the early CP field lies directly posterior to the early VP field within the ALPM (Fig. 4A,A′). Interestingly, although there was an anterior shift in nkx2.5 expression in Cyp26 deficient embryos, nkx2.5 and etv2 expression were no longer located adjacent to each other (Fig. 4B,B′). Instead, there was a small but noticeable gap between etv2 and nkx2.5 expression in Cyp26-deficient embryos (Fig. 4B,B′). We found the space between nkx2.5 and etv2 intriguing, because at this stage nkx2.5 is primarily a ventricular progenitor marker. Therefore, we examined the boundaries of hand2 and etv2, as hand2 expression has been proposed to be a better marker of the entire CP field at 8 s (Schoenebeck et al., 2007). In contrast to what was found with nkx2.5, we found that the hand2 and etv2 expression domains were directly adjacent in both wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. Therefore, our data suggest that loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to a differential shift in CP markers, and potentially an expanded atrial specific progenitor population.

Fig. 4.

Loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to differential shifts in cardiac progenitor markers. (A-B′) Double in situ hybridization of nkx2.5 (red) and etv2 (blue) shows a small gap between expression domains in Cyp26-deficient embryos that is not present in wild-type siblings. (C-D′) Double in situ hybridization with hand2 (blue) and etv2 (red) shows no space between expression domains in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. A-D are dorsal views with anterior upwards. A′-D′ are dorsal views with anterior leftwards. A′-D′ correspond to boxed areas in A-D, respectively. Arrows indicate the borders between expression domains.

Fig. 4.

Loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to differential shifts in cardiac progenitor markers. (A-B′) Double in situ hybridization of nkx2.5 (red) and etv2 (blue) shows a small gap between expression domains in Cyp26-deficient embryos that is not present in wild-type siblings. (C-D′) Double in situ hybridization with hand2 (blue) and etv2 (red) shows no space between expression domains in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. A-D are dorsal views with anterior upwards. A′-D′ are dorsal views with anterior leftwards. A′-D′ correspond to boxed areas in A-D, respectively. Arrows indicate the borders between expression domains.

Previous studies of gir mutants have shown there is an anterior shift in the forelimb (pectoral fin) bud field within the ALPM (Emoto et al., 2005), suggesting the hypothesis that the progenitor field immediately posterior to the cardiac field, which encompasses the forelimb field (Waxman et al., 2008; Sorrell and Waxman, 2011), may be expanded. To determine whether the progenitor field posterior to the CP field is expanded in Cyp26-deficient embryos, we examined dhrs3a, which is a RA-responsive gene that lies immediately posterior to the CPs (Waxman et al., 2008; Feng et al., 2010). We found a rostral shift in the anterior border and overall expansion of dhrs3a expression at 8 s in Cyp26-deficient embryos (Fig. 3K,L). We then wanted to determine whether the overall length of the ALPM was affected in Cyp26-deficient embryos at 8 s. We found that the combined length of etv2, nkx2.5 and dhrs3a expression is unchanged between wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos (Fig. 3N). Altogether, these data indicate that Cyp26 deficiency at this stage does not alter the size of the ALPM, but instead produces a realignment of the progenitor field boundaries within the ALPM.

Inhibition of RA restores ALPM marker expression within Cyp26-deficient embryos

Although previous data suggest that the role of Cyp26 enzymes is to specifically degrade RA (White et al., 1997), we wanted to exclude the possibility that the phenotypes are due to off target effects of the MOs. Therefore, we treated wild-type siblings and Cyp26-deficient embryos with either DMSO (vehicle control) or 2.5 μM DEAB, a pharmacological inhibitor of the major RA-synthesizing enzyme Raldh2 (Russo et al., 1988). We found that treating Cyp26-deficient embryos with 2.5 μM DEAB, a dose that produces phenotypes consistent with moderate loss of RA signaling (Maves and Kimmel, 2005), was able to rescue the shifts in cardiac and VP markers in the ALPM (Fig. 5A-I), suggesting that increased RA due to Cyp26 depletion is the cause of the differential anterior shifts of ALPM lineages.

Fig. 5.

Inhibition of RA restores the sizes of the cardiovascular progenitor fields in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (A-D) nkx2.5 expression in wild-type, DEAB-treated, Cyp26-deficient and Cyp26-deficient+DEAB-treated embryos. (C) Cyp26-deficient embryos have an anterior shift in nkx2.5 expression, which is rescued in (D) DEAB-treated Cyp26-deficient embryos and comparable with wild-type and DEAB-treated embryos (A,B). Arrows in A-D indicate distances between posterior eye and the anterior border of nkx2.5 expression. (E-H) etv2 expression in wild-type, DEAB-treated, Cyp26-deficient and Cyp26-deficient+DEAB-treated embryos. (G) Cyp26-deficient embryos show a posterior truncation in etv2 expression, which is rescued in DEAB-treated Cyp26-deficient embryos (H). (I) Measurements of length of etv2 expression and distance from the anterior tip of the embryo to anterior border of nkx2.5 expression. For etv2 measurements: WT, n=27; DEAB-treated, n=30; Cyp26-deficient, n=17; Cyp26-deficient + DEAB-treated embryos, n=22. For nkx2.5 measurements: WT, n=27; DEAB-treated, n=26; Cyp26-deficient, n=18; Cyp26-deficient + DEAB-treated embryos, n=22. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Fig. 5.

Inhibition of RA restores the sizes of the cardiovascular progenitor fields in Cyp26-deficient embryos. (A-D) nkx2.5 expression in wild-type, DEAB-treated, Cyp26-deficient and Cyp26-deficient+DEAB-treated embryos. (C) Cyp26-deficient embryos have an anterior shift in nkx2.5 expression, which is rescued in (D) DEAB-treated Cyp26-deficient embryos and comparable with wild-type and DEAB-treated embryos (A,B). Arrows in A-D indicate distances between posterior eye and the anterior border of nkx2.5 expression. (E-H) etv2 expression in wild-type, DEAB-treated, Cyp26-deficient and Cyp26-deficient+DEAB-treated embryos. (G) Cyp26-deficient embryos show a posterior truncation in etv2 expression, which is rescued in DEAB-treated Cyp26-deficient embryos (H). (I) Measurements of length of etv2 expression and distance from the anterior tip of the embryo to anterior border of nkx2.5 expression. For etv2 measurements: WT, n=27; DEAB-treated, n=30; Cyp26-deficient, n=17; Cyp26-deficient + DEAB-treated embryos, n=22. For nkx2.5 measurements: WT, n=27; DEAB-treated, n=26; Cyp26-deficient, n=18; Cyp26-deficient + DEAB-treated embryos, n=22. All images are dorsal views with anterior upwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Cyp26 enzymes are necessary to balance the vascular and cardiac lineages

We wanted to examine more closely the cell fates of the cardiovascular progenitors from the ALPM. In particular, we wanted to gain insight into the source of the surplus atrial cells, as we have no definitive markers for atrial progenitors. Therefore, we performed lineage-tracing experiments using caged-fluorescein to determine the fates of progenitors in the ALPM at 7-9 s, similar to work described previously (Fig. 6A) (Schoenebeck et al., 2007; Waxman et al., 2008). Consistent with previous fate maps (Schoenebeck et al., 2007), our fate map showed that in wild-type embryos, all endothelial and endocardial cells arose from progenitors in the ALPM that were anterior to the tip of the notochord (Fig. 6B-D,G). Moreover, progenitor cells labeled anterior to the midbrain-hindbrain boundary (MHB) exclusively gave rise to cranial vasculature and endocardium (Fig. 6B-D,G). Consistent with the truncated expression of VPs markers in Cyp26-deficient embryos, we did not find endothelial- or endocardial-fated cells posterior to the MHB (Fig. 6B-D,G), whereas labeled progenitors anterior to the MHB that gave rise to the endothelial cells were significantly less common (Fig. 6B-D,G). With respect to the atrial and ventricular progenitors, in wild-type embryos the anterior limit of the CPs was between the tip of the notochord and the MHB, which again was consistent with previous fate maps (Fig. 6B,E,G) (Serbedzija et al., 1998; Schoenebeck et al., 2007). However, in Cyp26-deficient embryos we found that myocardial-fated cells sometimes originated as anteriorly as adjacent to the posterior eye, which was never found in the fate maps from wild-type embryos (Fig. 6B,E). Moreover, we found that the myocardial progenitors found in the anterior of Cyp26-deficient embryos gave rise to both atrial and ventricle cells (Fig. 6B,E), suggesting there is an anterior shift of both these CPs.

Fig. 6.

Lineage tracing of the ALPM of Cyp26-deficient embryos suggests a fate transformation between atrial and endothelial progenitors. (A) Schematic of fate-mapping procedure. (B) Composite fate map of wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos, depicting the fates of uncaged cells. (C-E) Individual maps to showing contribution to (C) endothelial cells, (D) endocardium and (E) myocardium. Line in C-E indicates MHB. (F,G) Percentages of contribution anterior to the notochord and MHB in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (H) Fate map of wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos depicting chamber contribution of myocardial fated cells. Brackets indicate anterior cardiac region. (I) Percentages of total contribution to the chambers in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. ey, eye; mhb, midbrain-hindbrain boundary; nc, notochord.

Fig. 6.

Lineage tracing of the ALPM of Cyp26-deficient embryos suggests a fate transformation between atrial and endothelial progenitors. (A) Schematic of fate-mapping procedure. (B) Composite fate map of wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos, depicting the fates of uncaged cells. (C-E) Individual maps to showing contribution to (C) endothelial cells, (D) endocardium and (E) myocardium. Line in C-E indicates MHB. (F,G) Percentages of contribution anterior to the notochord and MHB in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. (H) Fate map of wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos depicting chamber contribution of myocardial fated cells. Brackets indicate anterior cardiac region. (I) Percentages of total contribution to the chambers in wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos. ey, eye; mhb, midbrain-hindbrain boundary; nc, notochord.

To determine whether there is a relative increase in atrial progenitors in Cyp26-deficient embryos, we next compared the frequency that we observed atrial and ventricular progenitors to the total number of times we labeled CPs from our lineage tracing. Although the frequency of ventricular progenitors between wild-type and Cyp26-deficient embryos was relatively similar, 95% (19/20) and 79% (22/28), respectively (P>0.2), we found a strong trend towards an increase in the overall frequency of labeled atrial progenitors, 30% (6/20) in wild type versus 60% (17/28) in Cyp26-deficient embryos (P<0.1) (Fig. 6I). Furthermore, when we examined the frequency of atrial cell contribution in the anterior region of the ALPM that gave rise to ectopic myocardial cells in Cyp26-deficient embryos (bracket in Fig. 6H), we found a significant increase in the frequency of labeled cells that gave rise to atrial cells, 69% (9/13) compared with 30% in wild-type siblings (P<0.05) (Fig. 6H,I). Therefore, our lineage tracing data suggest that in Cyp26-deficient embryos there is a shift in the boundary between endothelial and CPs, and, importantly, that there is an increase in the number of atrial progenitors within the ALPM.

Loss of Cyp26 enzymes leads to disrupted cranial vasculature development

Because we observed a reduction in the VP expression and reduced frequency of cranial vasculature from our fate map, we asked whether there were abnormalities in vascular morphology and/or cell number at later stages in Cyp26-depleted embryos. To answer this question, we used Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos, which facilitated analysis of cranial endothelial structures and cell counting. For the purposes of this study, we considered anything anterior to the first somite to be cranial vasculature. We found that the region anterior to the first somite was considerably shortened in Cyp26-deficient embryos compared with wild-type siblings (Fig. 7A,B). Moreover, we found that the primordial midbrain channel and the anterior and middle cerebral veins had significantly disrupted morphology (Fig. 7A,B). When we counted the cranial endothelial cells, we found that Cyp26-deficient embryos had a ∼40% reduction in anterior endothelial and endocardial cells compared with wild-type siblings (Fig. 7C-E). Although cyp26a1-deficient and gir mutants have a modest truncation of etv2 and tal1 expression within the ALPM (supplementary material Fig. S7I,J,M,N and Fig. S10E-H), this patterning defect does not lead to a significant decrease in endothelial cell number at 28 hpf (supplementary material Fig. S11A-C). Therefore, our data suggest that the reduction of VPs in Cyp26-deficient embryos leads to morphological abnormalities and decreased cranial endothelial cell number.

Fig. 7.

Cyp26-deficient embryos have decreased anterior endothelial cell number. (A,B) Optical sections of uninjected sibling and Cyp26-deficient Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos show that Cyp26-deficient embryos have mispatterned cranial vasculature. (C,D) Representative immunostained Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos for counting the cranial endothelial and endocardial cells (green). Somites and myocardial cells are indicated in red. (E) Endothelial and endocardial cell counts at 28 hpf. WT, n=10; Cyp26-deficient, n=11. All images are lateral views with anterior towards the right. Arrowheads in A and B indicate primordial midbrain channel and the anterior and middle cerebral veins. Arrows in A-D indicate the somite boundary. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Fig. 7.

Cyp26-deficient embryos have decreased anterior endothelial cell number. (A,B) Optical sections of uninjected sibling and Cyp26-deficient Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos show that Cyp26-deficient embryos have mispatterned cranial vasculature. (C,D) Representative immunostained Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos for counting the cranial endothelial and endocardial cells (green). Somites and myocardial cells are indicated in red. (E) Endothelial and endocardial cell counts at 28 hpf. WT, n=10; Cyp26-deficient, n=11. All images are lateral views with anterior towards the right. Arrowheads in A and B indicate primordial midbrain channel and the anterior and middle cerebral veins. Arrows in A-D indicate the somite boundary. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05). Error bars indicate s.d.

Cyp26 enzymes act non-autonomously on the cardiovascular progenitors

We next wanted to understand the cellular mechanism by which Cyp26 enzymes act on the cranial endothelial progenitors, i.e. if the Cyp26 enzymes are required within the VP cells or within the surrounding environment to moderate RA levels. A clear mechanism was not suggested by the expression patterns of the Cyp26 enzymes and the VP markers because although there is overlap between cyp26a1, cyp26c1 and etv2 expression, numerous cells did not have overlapping expression (Fig. 1C-D′). To test where the Cyp26 enzymes are required, we performed cell transplantation and mosaic analysis using donor cells obtained from Tg(kdrl:mCherry) embryos, which facilitated the observation of donor-derived endothelial cells (Fig. 8A). We then scored the frequency of contribution to the cranial and trunk vasculature at 48 hpf. When we transplanted Cyp26-deficient donor cells into wild-type hosts, we found that Cyp26-deficient donor cells contributed to the cranial endothelial and endocardial cells at a slightly reduced, but not statistically significant (P>0.2), frequency than that achieved when wild-type donors were placed into wild-type hosts (Fig. 8B), suggesting that Cyp26 enzymes are not required within the individual VPs to promote proper specification and that the surrounding wild-type cells can protect individual cells that have reduced Cyp26 expression. Conversely, when we placed wild-type cells into Cyp26-deficient embryos, we found there was a dramatic decrease in the frequency of cranial endothelial and endocardial contribution compared with when wild-type cells were transplanted into wild-type hosts (Fig. 8B), suggesting that loss of Cyp26 enzymes can cause inhibition of endothelial cell specification in individual cells, presumably owing to excess RA in the local environment. In both sets of experiments, we found that trunk endothelial cells contributed at the same frequency (Fig. 8B). Taken together, this set of experiments suggests that loss of Cyp26 enzymes can have cell non-autonomous consequences on the RA levels within ALPM, which must be tempered to promote proper cranial endothelial and endocardial cell specification.

Fig. 8.

Cyp26 enzymes act non-autonomously to promote cranial endothelial specification. (A) Transplant protocol. Tg(kdrl:mCherry) embryos were injected with a blue lineage tracer. Donor cells are then transplanted into the marginal zone of host embryos and scored for endothelial contribution at 48 hpf. (B,C) Representative Tg(kdrl:mCherry) donor cells that incorporated into the cranial vasculature and trunk vasculature. (D) Transplant results indicating that wild-type donor cells incorporate significantly less frequently into cranial vasculature and endocardium in Cyp26-deficient host embryos than in wild-type host embryos. Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of embryos that had contributed to the designated tissue relative to the total embryos. Images are lateral views with anterior rightwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05).

Fig. 8.

Cyp26 enzymes act non-autonomously to promote cranial endothelial specification. (A) Transplant protocol. Tg(kdrl:mCherry) embryos were injected with a blue lineage tracer. Donor cells are then transplanted into the marginal zone of host embryos and scored for endothelial contribution at 48 hpf. (B,C) Representative Tg(kdrl:mCherry) donor cells that incorporated into the cranial vasculature and trunk vasculature. (D) Transplant results indicating that wild-type donor cells incorporate significantly less frequently into cranial vasculature and endocardium in Cyp26-deficient host embryos than in wild-type host embryos. Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of embryos that had contributed to the designated tissue relative to the total embryos. Images are lateral views with anterior rightwards. Significant differences compared with controls are indicated (*P<0.05).

In the present study, we examined the earliest requirements for Cyp26 enzymes in cardiovascular development. We find that Cyp26a1 and Cyp26c1 are redundantly required to limit the size of the atrium and promote proper cranial endothelial and endocardial development. Cyp26-deficient embryos have a rostral shift and expansion of the CP field into the region of the ALPM that would normally give rise to cranial endothelial and endocardial progenitors, suggesting the increased RA in Cyp26-deficient embryos promotes specification of atrial progenitors at the expense of the endothelial progenitors. Importantly, our data contrast with a previous model suggesting that RA promotes atrial cell specification at the expense of ventricular cell specification. Additionally, our data suggest that the effects of Cyp26 deficiency on endothelial specification within the ALPM are cell non-autonomous, providing the first evidence that, at least within the mesoderm, Cyp26 enzyme-expressing cells can act as a sink that affects RA levels within neighboring tissues. Thus, we have uncovered a previously unappreciated mechanism by which Cyp26 enzymes are required to limit RA levels within the ALPM, which is necessary for proper cardiovascular development through balancing the sizes of the atrial and endothelial progenitor fields.

Independent chamber specification defects in Cyp26 deficient embryos

In all vertebrates, treatment of embryos with RA causes atrial and ventricular malformations (Osmond et al., 1991; Stainier and Fishman, 1992; Waxman and Yelon, 2009). Because of this and the established functions of RA signaling in anterior-posterior patterning, previous studies had proposed that excess RA signaling leads to increased atrial specification at the expense of ventricular specification (Yutzey et al., 1994; Hochgreb et al., 2003). In contrast to the previous hypothesis, our complementary analysis of ISH, lineage tracing and cardiomyocyte counting indicate that Cyp26 loss results in increased atrial progenitor specification and atrial cardiomyocytes; this is independent of effects on ventricular progenitor specification and cell number, which were unchanged. Importantly, the independent effects on chamber specification in Cyp26-deficient embryos corroborate recent studies examining increases and decreases of RA signaling in vertebrates using other methods (Waxman et al., 2008; Waxman and Yelon, 2009; D'Aniello et al., 2013). Specifically, loss of Cyp26 results in chamber defects that are equivalent to treatment with moderate RA concentrations (∼0.1 μM), although treatment with higher concentrations of RA is able to eliminate both atrial and ventricular progenitors (Waxman and Yelon, 2009). We propose that a modest increase in RA in Cyp26-deficient embryos is not due to inefficiency of the MO depletion, because we do not obtain indications of more pronounced increases in RA using Keto treatments and gir mutants injected with cyp26c1 MOs when examining the heart and the hindbrain. Moreover, using these tools, we recapitulate the effects on the hindbrain seen in previous studies (Hernandez et al., 2007), which also have maximal phenotypes resembling treatment with moderate concentrations of RA. Therefore, we favor the hypothesis that a modest increase in RA signaling, due to Cyp26 deficiency, is the maximal effect achievable from endogenously produced RA. However, as numerous feedback mechanisms of RA exist to maintain appropriate embryonic RA levels (Niederreither et al., 1997; Dobbs-McAuliffe et al., 2004; Emoto et al., 2005; Sandell et al., 2007, 2012; White et al., 2007; D'Aniello et al., 2013), it is also feasible that diminished raldh2 expression, which occurs in Cyp26-deficient embryos (Emoto et al., 2005), contributes to the attenuation of RA levels. Thus, our data support a model where loss of Cyp26 enzymes results in endogenous increases in RA that promote atrial cell specification independently of effects on ventricular cell specification.

Atrial progenitors are specified at the expense of VPs in Cyp26-deficient embryos

Within the anterior of the embryo, previous studies have focused on the consequences of Cyp26 deficiency to hindbrain patterning in mice and zebrafish. Consistent with increases in RA, Cyp26-deficient embryos have posteriorized hindbrains, which are manifested by rostral shifts in the posterior rhombomeres at the expense of the more anterior rhombomeres (Niederreither et al., 2002; Hernandez et al., 2007; Uehara et al., 2007). Although these models have cardiovascular malformations, the consequences, if any, of Cyp26 deficiency on the adjacent ALPM were not previously examined. We find that the cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 expression partially overlaps with the VPs and that Cyp26 deficiency results in differential effects on the ALPM progenitor fields. Specifically, both our ISH analysis and lineage tracing in Cyp26-deficient embryos support the observation that the anterior endothelial progenitor field is truncated, the CP (middle) field is rostrally shifted and modestly enlarged, whereas the most posterior field of the ALPM, which in wild-type embryos harbors forelimb progenitors (Emoto et al., 2005; Waxman et al., 2008), is expanded. Interestingly, the total length of the ALPM at this stage is unchanged, suggesting that the Cyp26 enzymes are necessary to limit RA signaling that refines the boundaries of these progenitor fields within a pre-specified ALPM territory.

Because previous studies have shown that the cardiac and VP fields within the ALPM lay directly adjacent to each other and share a common progenitor, we were particularly interested in how Cyp26 deficiency affected the borders of these fields. Unexpectedly, we found that, in addition to the general rostral shift of the CPs, the Cyp26 deficiency caused differential rostral shifts in the atrial and ventricular progenitor fields. In wild-type embryos, both the CP markers nkx2.5 (ventricular progenitors) and hand2 (pan-CPs) lie directly posterior and adjacent to the more anterior VP marker etv2. However, in Cyp26-deficient embryos, the nkx2.5 and etv2 borders no longer abut, leaving a noticeable gap between the ventricular and endothelial progenitor expression domains. Conversely, hand2, which marks both atrial and ventricular progenitors, is still located directly adjacent to the etv2 expression in Cyp26-deficient embryos, suggesting that the hand2+/nkx2.5 expression domain adjacent to the etv2 expression contains surplus atrial progenitors, which are at the expense of the endothelial progenitors. Although our fate maps of Cyp26-deficient embryos were not able to discern such a small region of surplus atrial specification, they do complement the ISH analysis and provide evidence that there is an increased frequency of atrial progenitor specification, particularly in the more anterior zone of the atrial progenitor field.

When considering our results, it is interesting to compare them with recent observations from Schoenebeck et al. (Schoenebeck et al., 2007), who studied cardiac and hematovascular patterning of the ALPM in cloche mutants and etv2/tal1-deficient embryos. Strikingly similar to what we have observed in Cyp26-deficient embryos, cloche mutants and etv2/tal1-deficient embryos, which lack endothelial cells, have an anterior expansion of hand2 expression within the ALPM that leads to surplus atrial cardiomyocytes potentially at the expense of the lost endothelial cells (Schoenebeck et al., 2007). Although the overt phenotypes with respect to the ALPM and surplus atrial cell production are remarkably similar in Cyp26-deficient and cloche embryos, there are no other phenotypic indications that RA signaling and cloche are functioning in the same genetic pathway, suggesting these similar phenotypes are achieved by two independent mechanisms. Therefore, our findings suggest that Cyp26 enzymes promote vascular specification at the expense of atrial specification by properly determining the boundaries between the atrial and endothelial progenitor fields within the ALPM, providing a significant advance in our understanding of the mechanisms underlying cardiovascular defects in Cyp26-deficient embryos.

Cyp26 enzymes promote vascular specification

The effects of inappropriate RA signaling on endothelial development have been studied in other contexts. The most detailed studies have been of Raldh2-deficient mice, i.e. RA signaling-deficient mice, which have increased endothelial cell proliferation (Lai et al., 2003; Bohnsack and Hirschi, 2004). Conversely, Cyp26-deficient mice, which are hypersensitive to RA, have cranial vascular defects when mothers are fed a vitamin A-rich diet (Ribes et al., 2007). Furthermore, Por knockout mice, which lack the oxidoreductase required for all cytochrome p450 activity and have increased embryonic RA, also show severe vascular defects and are early embryonic lethal (Otto et al., 2003). Additionally, chick embryos treated with a Cyp26 inhibitor during early somitogenesis have pharyngeal arch artery defects (Roberts et al., 2006), whereas zebrafish gir mutants have been shown to have minor defects in the common cardinal veins (Emoto et al., 2005). However, the previous studies of Cyp26- and Por-deficient embryos did not examine the underlying mechanisms of the vascular defects.

We find that Cyp26-deficient embryos have aberrant cranial vascular morphology and reduced cranial endothelial and endocardial cell number, which is due to a truncation of the anterior endothelial field within the ALPM. Because previous studies found that modulation of RA signaling could affect endothelial proliferation, we also examined proliferation. However, we did not find changes in progenitor proliferation (supplementary material Fig. S12) nor did we find increased apoptosis (supplementary material Fig. S13). Therefore, we currently favor the model that increased RA levels in Cyp26-deficient embryos primarily inhibits endothelial and endocardial progenitor specification. Moreover, we also did not find a difference in proliferation of differentiated endothelial cells in Cyp26 deficient embryos compared with wild-type siblings at later stages (supplementary material Fig. S12), suggesting that the cranial vascular defects in Cyp26-deficient embryos are not due to reduced endothelial cell proliferation after they have differentiated. Altogether, our results support that Cyp26 enzymes are required to promote proper specification of the most anterior endothelial progenitors of the ALPM, which give rise to the cranial vasculature and endocardium.

Cell non-autonomous requirements of Cyp26 enzymes on RA signaling gradient

In addressing the cellular requirements for Cyp26 enzymes in endothelial progenitor specification, we found that Cyp26 enzymes are required cell non-autonomously to promote proper endothelial specification, despite some overlap in expression with the endothelial cell progenitors. These data suggest that Cyp26 enzymes are not necessarily required within a single cell to control an endothelial progenitor fate decision. Instead, a community of Cyp26-expressing cells is the primary factor within the anterior embryo that creates an environment for proper cardiovascular field establishment and subsequent fate decisions. Additionally, as Cyp26 expression has minimal overlap with the anterior CPs, this also suggests the requirements of Cyp26 enzymes on CPs are indirect. Although it has been suggested that Cyp26 enzymes may have cell non-autonomous effects on RA that pattern the hindbrain in mice (Uehara et al., 2009), this hypothesis was not tested experimentally. Instead, recent studies in zebrafish have proposed that local RA degradation controls the RA signaling gradient within the embryo, in effect arguing for a cell autonomous role of Cyp26 enzymes that creates the RA gradient (Hernandez et al., 2007). However, these studies focused primarily on hindbrain patterning and did not formally rule out cell non-autonomous effects on RA levels due to Cyp26 enzymes. It is also possible that Cyp26 enzymes can cause non-autonomous effects in both the hindbrain and ALPM. However, it would be interesting if the cellular mechanisms creating RA gradients within different tissues differed, because, unlike the hindbrain, the cells of the ALPM are mesenchymal in nature. Therefore, our transplantation experiments are the first to suggest that loss of Cyp26 enzymes, at least in the mesoderm, can non-autonomously affect the local RA levels that affect the patterning of neighboring tissues.

Conclusions

In conclusion, excess embryonic RA is teratogenic in all vertebrates, highlighting the importance of Cyp26 enzymes in limiting RA during embryogenesis. To illustrate this, Cyp26-deficient vertebrate embryos had poorly characterized cardiovascular defects, necessitating a better understanding of the nature of these defects. Our studies provide novel insight into the earliest consequences and mechanisms of Cyp26 deficiency that underlie atrial and cranial vascular malformations in vertebrate embryos, which will help us to understand the etiology of developmental syndromes with elevated RA signaling in humans.

Zebrafish husbandry and transgenic and mutant lines

Adult zebrafish (Danio rerio) were raised and maintained under standard laboratory conditions (Westerfield, 2000). The transgenic lines used were: Tg(–5.1myl7:DsRed-NLS) (Mably et al., 2003), Tg(−6.5kdrl:mCherry)ci5 (Proulx et al., 2010), Tg(12xRARE-ef1a:EGFP)sk72 (Waxman and Yelon, 2011), Tg(kdrl:nlsEGFP) (Blum et al., 2008), TgBAC(etv2:EGFP) (Proulx et al., 2010) and TgBAC(−36nkx2.5:ZsYellow) (Zhou et al., 2011). The giraffe (gir)/cyp26a1 mutant line was used (Emoto et al., 2005).

Morpholino oligonucleotide (MO) injections

Zebrafish embryos were injected with MOs at the one-cell stage. MO sequences for cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 have been published previously (Hernandez et al., 2007; D'Aniello et al., 2013). Singular knockdown of cyp26a1 used a cocktail of 4 ng cyp26a1 MO1 and 2 ng cyp26a1 MO2. cyp26c1 singular knockdown used 6 ng cyp26c1 MO. Double knockdown of cyp26a1 and cyp26c1 was achieved using a cocktail of 2 ng cyp26a1 MO1, 1 ng cyp26a1 MO2 and 6 ng cyp26c1, which produced phenotypes equivalent to cyp26a1/gir mutants injected with cyp26c1 MO. To counteract non-specific MO-induced cell death, 3 ng p53 MO was used in all injections (Robu et al., 2007).

In situ hybridization

Whole mount in situ hybridization (ISH) was performed using a previously established protocol (Oxtoby and Jowett, 1993). All probes have been previously reported: myl7 (formerly cmlc2; ZDB-GENE-991019), vmhc (ZDB-GENE-991123-5), amhc (ZDB-GENE-031112-1), nkx2.5 (ZDB-GENE-980526), hand2 (000511-1), dhrs3a (ZDB-GENE-040801-217), eng2a (ZDB-GENE-980526-167), egr2b (formerly krox20; ZDB-GENE-980526-283), etv2 (ZDB-GENE-050622-14), tal1 (ZDB-GENE-980526-501), gata4 (ZDB-GENE-980526-476), hoxb4a (ZDB-GENE-990415-105), spi1b (previously pu.1, ZDB-GENE-980526-164) and ZsYellow (accession number: Q9U6Y4). Double ISHs were carried out essentially as described previously (Prince et al., 1998). Both INT-BCIP (Roche) and Fast Red (Sigma) were used. Embryos were de-yolked then flatmounted for imaging using a Zeiss M2BioV12 stereomicroscope. For ISH experiments analyzing gir embryos, the embryos were genotyped as described previously (Emoto et al., 2005).

Area and length measurements

Area measurements of myl7, vmhc, amhc and spi1b were carried out using ImageJ as previously described (Waxman et al., 2008). Length of etv2, nkx2.5, dhrs3a and spi1b expression was measured from lateral and dorsal views with ImageJ. All statistical analysis was carried out using Student's t-test with P<0.05 considered to be statistically significant.

Immunohistochemistry and cell counting

Immunohistochemistry, cardiac cell counting and statistical analysis were performed essentially as previously described (Waxman et al., 2008). Vascular cell counts were done using Tg(kdrl:nEGFP) embryos that were immunostained using MF20 (Stainier and Fishman, 1992) and chicken anti-GFP (Invitrogen) primary antibodies and IgG2b-Tritc (Southern Biotech) and anti-chicken (Southern Biotech) secondary antibodies, respectively. To analyze the cranial vascular structures embryos, we imaged embryos using a Zeiss Apotome. For endothelial cell counting, embryos were flattened in a lateral orientation and imaged using a Zeiss M2BioV12 fluorescent stereomicroscope. To analyze heart morphology at 36 hpf, MF20 (ventricle) and S46 (atrium) were used (Stainier and Fishman, 1992). To assay apoptosis, activated caspase 3 (casp3) antibody (BD Bioscience) was used. Cell proliferation in the VPs was assayed using a pHH3 antibody (Millipore) to detect proliferating cells and the chicken anti-GFP antibody to detect etv2-expressing progenitors in TgBAC(etv2:EGFP) embryos. Embryos were then imaged at 8 s using a Nikon A1 confocal microscope and at 24 hpf using a Zeiss Apotome.

Real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR)

cDNA was prepared from whole embryos as previously described (D'Aniello et al., 2013). RT-qPCR using SYBR green PCR master mix (Applied Biosystems) was performed under standard PCR conditions in Bio-Rad CFX PCR machine. Expression levels of myl7, vmhc, amhc, nkx2.5, gata4, hand2, etv2 and tal1 were standardized to β-actin. Data were analyzed using 2−ΔΔCT Livak Method and Student's t-test. Primer sequences can be found in supplementary material Table S1.

Drug treatments

Embryos were treated with 25 μM ketoconazole (Sigma) beginning at the two-cell stage. Embryos were treated with 2.5 μM DEAB (4-diethylaminobenzaldehyde; Sigma) beginning at 50% epiboly.

Lineage tracing

Lineage tracing for fate-mapping experiments was performed essentially as previously described (Schoenebeck et al., 2007; Waxman et al., 2008). Two or three cells in the ALPM were uncaged between 7 s and 9 s using an Andor Micropoint laser, and then imaged with a Zeiss AxioImager microscope. Embryos were grown to 48 hpf then fixed, stained and scored for contribution to the vascular and cardiac cells. Statistical analysis was performed using a two-tailed Z-test where P<0.05 is considered significant.

Cell transplantation experiments

To assess cellular autonomy, Tg(kdrl:mCherry) donor embryos were injected at the one-cell stage with Cascade blue-dextran (Invitrogen). At the sphere stage, ∼20 cells were transplanted in the margin of wild-type (control) and Cyp26-deficient host embryos. Host embryos were then grown to 48 hpf and scored for contribution to cranial vasculature, endocardium and trunk vasculature. Reciprocal experiments to test a cell-autonomous role for the Cyp26 enzymes were performed similarly, except Cyp26-deficient donor cells and wild-type hosts were used. Statistical analysis was performed using a two-tailed Z-test where P<0.05 is considered significant.

The authors are grateful to E. D'Aniello and S. Sumanas for discussions and reading of the manuscript, and to S. Sumanas for TgBAC(etv2:EGFP) embryos.

Author contributions

A.B.R. performed all experiments. A.B.R. and J.S.W. designed the experiments, performed the data analysis and wrote the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R00 HL901126 and R01 HL112893-A1 to J.S.W.]. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.

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Competing interests

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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