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Review Article

T-box factors: Insights into the evolutionary emergence of the complex heart

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Pages 680-693 | Received 12 Feb 2011, Accepted 14 Jul 2011, Published online: 19 Sep 2011
 

Abstract

The heart as a functional organ first appeared in bilaterians as a single peristaltic pump and evolved through arthropods, fish, amphibians, and finally mammals into a four-chambered engine controlling blood-flow within the body. The acquisition of cardiac complexity in the evolving heart was a product of gene duplication events and the co-option of novel signaling pathways to an ancestral cardiac-specific gene network. T-box factors belong to an evolutionary conserved family of transcriptional regulators with diverse roles in development. Their regulatory functions are integral in the initiation and potentiation of heart development, and mutations in these genes are associated with congenital heart defects. In this review we will discuss the evolutionary conserved cardiac regulatory functions of this family as well as their implication in disease in an aim to facilitate future gene-targeted and regenerative therapeutic remedies.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Mr Zahy AbdulSater and Mr Nehmé El-Hachem for critical review of the manuscript.

Declaration of interest: The authors state no conflict of interest and have received no payment in preparation of this manuscript.

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