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Organogenesis depends on orchestrated interactions between individual cells and morphogenetically relevant cues at the tissue level. This is true for the heart, whose function critically relies on well-ordered communication between neighboring cells, which is established and fine-tuned during embryonic development. For an integrated understanding of the development of structure and function, we need to move from isolated snap-shot observations of either microscopic or macroscopic parameters to simultaneous and, ideally continuous, cell-to-organ scale imaging. We introduce cell-accurate three-dimensional Ca2+-mapping of all cells in the entire electro-mechanically uncoupled heart during the looping stage of live embryonic zebrafish, using high-speed light sheet microscopy and tailored image processing and analysis. We show how myocardial region-specific heterogeneity in cell function emerges during early development and how structural patterning goes hand-in-hand with functional maturation of the entire heart. Our method opens the way to systematic, scale-bridging, in vivo studies of vertebrate organogenesis by cell-accurate structure-function mapping across entire organs.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.7554/eLife.28307

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2017-12-29T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

6

Keywords

Cardiac conduction, Cardiology, Light sheet microscopy, Optical mapping, Organogenesis, biophysics, developmental biology, image analysis, stem cells, structural biology, zebrafish, Animals, Heart, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Intravital Microscopy, Optical Imaging, Organogenesis, Zebrafish