(Press-News.org) Researchers at UCL and the Francis Crick Institute have, for the first time, identified the origin of cardiac cells using 3D images of a heart forming in real-time, inside a living mouse embryo.
For the study, published in The EMBO Journal, the team used a technique called advanced light-sheet microscopy on a specially engineered mouse model. This is a method where a thin sheet of light is used to illuminate and take detailed pictures of tiny samples, creating clear 3D images without causing any damage to living tissue.
By doing this, they were able to track individual cells as they moved and divided over the course of two days – from a critical stage of development known as gastrulation through to the point where the primitive heart begins to take shape. This allowed the researchers to identify the cellular origins of the heart.
Gastrulation is the process by which cells begin to specialise and organise into the body’s primary structures, including the heart. In humans, this occurs during the second week of pregnancy.
The study’s findings could revolutionise how scientists understand and treat congenital heart defects, the researchers say.
Senior author Dr Kenzo Ivanovitch (UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and British Heart Foundation Intermediate Research Fellow) said: “This is the first time we’ve been able to watch heart cells this closely, for this long, during mammalian development. We first had to reliably grow the embryos in a dish over long periods, from a few hours to a few days, and what we found was totally unexpected.”
Using fluorescent markers, the team tagged heart muscle cells (called cardiomyocytes) causing them to glow in distinct colours. Combined with light-sheet microscopy, this innovation allowed the researchers to create a detailed time-lapse video.
Snapshots were captured every two minutes over 40 hours, producing images with unprecedented spatial resolution.
The resulting footage showed how cells move, divide, and form the first parts of an embryo, like the heart. Each glowing cardiomyocyte could then be tracked back to earlier cells, allowing scientists to create a family tree of the cells. This helped them see exactly when and where the first cells that only make the heart appeared in the embryo.
At the very earliest stages, embryonic cells were multipotent (capable of becoming various cell types). These included not only heart cells but also others such as endocardial cells, a type of cell that lines the inner surfaces of blood vessels and heart chambers.
However, the researchers found that early during gastrulation (typically within the first four to five hours, after the first cell division), cells contributing solely to the heart emerge rapidly and behave in highly organised ways.
Rather than moving randomly, they follow distinct paths – almost as if they already know where they are going and what role they will play, whether contributing to the ventricles (the heart’s pumping chambers) or the atria (where blood enters the heart from the body and lungs).
Dr Ivanovitch said: “Our findings demonstrate that cardiac fate determination and directional cell movement may be regulated much earlier in the embryo than current models suggest.
“This fundamentally changes our understanding of cardiac development by showing that what appears to be chaotic cell migration is actually governed by hidden patterns that ensure proper heart formation.”
Lead author, PhD candidate Shayma Abukar (UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and UCL Institute for Cardiovascular Science) said: “We are now working to understand the signals that coordinate this complex choreography of cell movements during early heart development.
“The heart doesn’t come from a single group of cells, it forms from a coalition of distinct cell groups that appear at different times and places during gastrulation.”
The insights from the study could revolutionise how scientists understand and treat congenital heart defects, which affect nearly one in 100 babies. The findings could also accelerate progress in growing heart tissue in the lab for use in regenerative medicine.
Dr Ivanovitch said: “In the future, we hope this work will help uncover new mechanisms of organ formation. This will inform design principles to precisely program tissue patterns and shapes for tissue engineering.”
The research was supported by the British Heart Foundation.
END
Scientists film the heart forming in 3D earlier than ever before
Peer reviewed | Experimental study | Animals
2025-05-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Astrophysicists explore our galaxy’s magnetic turbulence in unprecedented detail using a new computer model
2025-05-13
Astronomers have developed a groundbreaking computer simulation to explore, in unprecedented detail, magnetism and turbulence in the interstellar medium (ISM) — the vast ocean of gas and charged particles that lies between stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Described in a new study published today in Nature Astronomy, the model is the most powerful to date, requiring the computing capability of the SuperMUC-NG supercomputer at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre in Germany. It directly challenges our understanding of how magnetized turbulence operates in astrophysical environments.
James Beattie, ...
Scientists precisely simulate turbulence in the Galaxy — it doesn’t behave like they thought
2025-05-13
From the ocean’s rolling swells to the bumpy ride of a jetliner, turbulence is everywhere. It breaks large waves into smaller ones, cascading energy across scales. It is ubitquitous throughout our Galaxy and the broader Universe, shaping the behavior of plasma, stars, and magnetic fields. Yet despite its ubiquity, turbulence remains one of the greatest unsolved problems in physics.
Now, by developing the world’s largest-ever simulations of magnetized turbulence, an international team of scientists has measured — with unprecedented precision — how ...
DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy
2025-05-13
Barcelona, 13 May 2025 – Just as species adapt over generations, our body’s cells accumulate DNA changes throughout life. Most are harmless, yet a few “driver” mutations give a cell a competitive edge and can spark cancer. Chemotherapy then adds a new evolutionary pressure, encouraging further genetic changes that let tumours bounce back.
Researchers at IRB Barcelona have developed DiffInvex, a computational framework that tracks how evolutionary pressures on genes change as healthy cells become tumours and as tumours face chemotherapy. Applied to more than 11,000 human cancer and healthy tissue genomes spanning ...
Combinations of chronic illnesses could double risk of depression
2025-05-13
People with multiple long-term physical health conditions are at a significantly greater risk of developing depression, a study shows.
Researchers found that some combinations of illnesses – particularly cardiometabolic ones like diabetes and heart disease – could more than double the likelihood of a future depression diagnosis.
With multimorbidity – when patients live with two or more chronic conditions – continuing to put pressure on an already stretched healthcare ...
Growth before photosynthesis: how trees regulate their water balance
2025-05-13
Plants have small pores on the underside of their leaves, known as stomata. When the sun rises, these pores open and the plants absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, which they need, in addition to sunlight and water, for photosynthesis. At the same time, water evaporates through the open stomata; for a tree, this may be several hundred liters per day.
When water is scarce, plants can close their stomata and thus prevent it from evaporating too much water. The fact that plants have this protective mechanism at their disposal is nothing new. Until now, however, it has not been clear when this closure occurs and what the trigger was. ...
Stress hormone pathways in primate brains reveal key insights for human mental health research
2025-05-13
ROCHESTER, New York, USA, 29 April 2025 -- In a comprehensive Genomic Psychiatry review article published today, researchers from the University of Rochester Medical Center have synthesized decades of research on stress hormone systems in primate brains, potentially unlocking new paths toward treating stress-related psychiatric disorders. The article offers groundbreaking insights into how corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), a key stress hormone, interacts with dopamine neuron populations in ways that differ significantly between rodents and primates.
The Stress-Dopamine Connection: More Complex Than Previously Understood
Stress ...
Enlarged salience network could be first reliable biomarker for depression risk
2025-05-13
OTTAWA, Ontario, Canada, 13 May 2025 - In a comprehensive Genomic Press Commentary published today, researchers have identified what could be the first reliable biomarker for depression risk, potentially transforming how this devastating condition is identified and treated. The commentary examines recent findings demonstrating that individuals with depression consistently exhibit a functionally enlarged salience network compared to non-depressed controls.
Distinctive Brain Connectivity Pattern Identified
The salience network, a neural system responsible for attention allocation and switching between different brain ...
Higher success rate using a simple oral swab test before IVF
2025-05-13
Brief facts about the study: fertility // randomised, clinical trial // 1,466 women.
The study has been published in Frontiers in Endocrinology.
About 15 per cent of all couples of reproductive age are involuntarily childless. A major reason why so many need assisted reproduction is that nowadays more and more people are putting off starting a family.
“This is a global trend that is expected to increase in the coming years. In Europe alone, one million IVF treatments are carried out each year; in Sweden, the corresponding number is 25,000,” ...
New survey shows privacy and safety tops list of parental concerns about screen time
2025-05-13
COLUMBUS, Ohio - As kids spend more time on screens, a new national survey conducted by Ipsos on behalf of The Kids Mental Health Foundation, founded by Nationwide Children’s Hospital, identifies parents’ greatest fears for their children around screen time.
The top three fears parents have around their child and screen time are: privacy and safety concerns (47%), exposure to misinformation (36%) and not socializing in person (34%). Fewer parents ranked concerns around body image and schoolwork high on their list.
“My biggest concerns with screens are making sure that my kids don't get exposed to things before I'm ready ...
Enhanced activity in the upper atmosphere of Sporadic E layers during the 2024 Mother’s Day super geomagnetic storm
2025-05-13
Fukuoka, Japan—In a paper published in Geophysical Research Letters, researchers from Kyushu University report on the activity of sporadic E layers—about 90-120 km above sea level—during the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm. The team found that the E layers were significantly enhanced during the recovery phase of the geomagnetic storm. Sporadic E layer, as the name suggests, is a phenomenon in which thin—about 1-5 km thick—but dense patches of ionized metals suddenly appear in the E layer of the ionosphere.
Moreover, the team found that these ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Expert view: AI meets the conditions for having free will – we need to give it a moral compass
Development of repetitive mechanical oscillation needle-free injection through electrically induced microbubbles
Including pork in plant-forward diets makes meals more appealing and just as healthy, study finds
‘Loop’hole: HIV-1 hijacks human immune cells using circular RNAs
New research study reveals sedentary behavior is an independent risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease
American Academy of Sleep Medicine announces 2025 award recipients
Scientists define the ingredients for finding natural clean hydrogen
New study sheds light on health differences between sexes
Scientists film the heart forming in 3D earlier than ever before
Astrophysicists explore our galaxy’s magnetic turbulence in unprecedented detail using a new computer model
Scientists precisely simulate turbulence in the Galaxy — it doesn’t behave like they thought
DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy
Combinations of chronic illnesses could double risk of depression
Growth before photosynthesis: how trees regulate their water balance
Stress hormone pathways in primate brains reveal key insights for human mental health research
Enlarged salience network could be first reliable biomarker for depression risk
Higher success rate using a simple oral swab test before IVF
New survey shows privacy and safety tops list of parental concerns about screen time
Enhanced activity in the upper atmosphere of Sporadic E layers during the 2024 Mother’s Day super geomagnetic storm
Accelerating bacterial evolution in the laboratory
Summer in the city
Echidna microbiome changes while mums nurse puggle
No increased risk of gynecological cancer with testosterone use after five years
Growth in informal lead mining is contributing to widespread poisoning
Unprecedented progress in tackling smoking during pregnancy threatened by NHS cuts, experts warn
Top scientific research recognized at ACC Asia Conference
GLP-1 drugs are helpful for children who are living with severe obesity, data from Swedish clinic indicates
Popular weight-loss drugs following bariatric surgery may offer additional cardiovascular benefits
Patients of an online obesity clinic achieved the same weight loss as those in clinical trials of semaglutide – but with much lower doses of the drug
Protein bars enriched with collagen have potential as a weight-loss aid, Spanish study finds
[Press-News.org] Scientists film the heart forming in 3D earlier than ever beforePeer reviewed | Experimental study | Animals