Role of epicardial mesothelial cells in the modification of phenotype and function of adult rat ventricular myocytes in primary coculture.

Abstract
Adult rat ventricular myocytes undergo a well-documented sequence of phenotypic changes during adaptation to primary culture. However, we observed that coculture of myocytes with a specific subset of nonmyocyte cardiac cells could slow and even reverse the process of adaptation. These nonmyocyte cells were isolated and identified by immunohistochemical and ultrastructural criteria as being of epicardial mesothelial origin. When added to long-term primary cultures of adult ventricular myocytes, epicardial mesothelial cells appeared to induce myofibrillar arrays that were more organized than those seen in noncocultured myocytes; these changes that occurred were concurrent with the appearance of large amplitude contractions and multicellular synchronous beating that was facilitated by gap junctions between myocytes and epicardial mesothelial cells. The changes in morphology and function were accompanied by a marked increase in beta-myosin heavy chain isoform transcription in cocultured myocytes, a return to ...