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Circulation Research
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Circulation Research. 2008
Published online before print June 12, 2008, doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.178525
A more recent version of this article appeared on July 3, 2008
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Submitted on January 22, 2008
Revised on May 24, 2008
Accepted on May 29, 2008

Local Activation or Implantation of Cardiac Progenitor Cells Rescues Scarred Infarcted Myocardium Improving Cardiac Function

Marcello Rota *; M. Elena Padin-Iruegas ; Yu Misao ; Antonella De Angelis ; Silvia Maestroni ; João Ferreira-Martins ; Emanuela Fiumana ; Raffaella Rastaldo ; Michael L. Arcarese ; Thomas S. Mitchell ; Alessandro Boni ; Roberto Bolli ; Konrad Urbanek ; Toru Hosoda ; Piero Anversa ; Annarosa Leri ; and Jan Kajstura

From the Departments of Anesthesia and Medicine and Division of Cardiology (M.R., M.E.P.-I., Y.M., A.D.A., S.M., J.F.-M., E.F., R.R., M.L.A., T.S.M., A.B., K.U., T.H., P.A., A.L., J.K.), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass; and Institute of Molecular Cardiology (R.B.), University of Louisville, Ky.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mrota{at}zeus.bwh.harvard.edu.

Ischemic heart disease is characterized chronically by a healed infarct, foci of myocardial scarring, cavitary dilation, and impaired ventricular performance. These alterations can only be reversed by replacement of scarred tissue with functionally competent myocardium. We tested whether cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) implanted in proximity of healed infarcts or resident CPCs stimulated locally by hepatocyte growth factor and insulin-like growth factor-1 invade the scarred myocardium and generate myocytes and coronary vessels improving the hemodynamics of the infarcted heart. Hepatocyte growth factor is a powerful chemoattractant of CPCs, and insulin-like growth factor-1 promotes their proliferation and survival. Injection of CPCs or growth factors led to the replacement of {approx}42% of the scar with newly formed myocardium, attenuated ventricular dilation and prevented the chronic decline in function of the infarcted heart. Cardiac repair was mediated by the ability of CPCs to synthesize matrix metalloproteinases that degraded collagen proteins, forming tunnels within the fibrotic tissue during their migration across the scarred myocardium. New myocytes had a 2n karyotype and possessed 2 sex chromosomes, excluding cell fusion. Clinically, CPCs represent an ideal candidate cell for cardiac repair in patients with chronic heart failure. CPCs may be isolated from myocardial biopsies and, following their expansion in vitro, administered back to the same patients avoiding the adverse effects associated with the use of nonautologous cells. Alternatively, growth factors may be delivered locally to stimulate resident CPCs and promote myocardial regeneration. These forms of treatments could be repeated over time to reduce progressively tissue scarring and expand the working myocardium.


Key words: cardiac repair • cardiac stem cells • chronic myocardial infarct