Cellular Biology |
From the Cardiovascular Research Institute, Department of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY; and the TardiniOlivetti Stem Cell Center (E.M., F.Q.), Parma, Italy.
Correspondence to Piero Anversa, MD, Cardiovascular Research Institute, Vosburgh Pavilion, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595. E-mail piero_anversa{at}nymc.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: cardiac progenitor cells myocardial regeneration mortality
| Introduction |
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Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) stimulates cell migration8 by expression of metalloproteinases (MMPs)9 that by breaking down the extracellular matrix favor cell locomotion, homing, and tissue reconstitution. The receptor of HGF, c-Met, is expressed in bone marrow progenitor cells, satellite cells, and embryonic myocytes.10,11 Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is mitogenic, antiapoptotic, and necessary for neural stem cell growth.12 IGF-1 promotes myocyte formation and attenuates myocyte death after infarction.13 Together, these findings prompted us to determine whether CSCs-ECCs express c-Met and whether HGF stimulates their migration to the infarcted myocardium. If CSCs-ECCs express IGF-1 receptor, IGF-1 may protect their viability and enhance their growth within the infarct. Thus, myocardial infarction was produced in mice and HGF and/or IGF-1 were locally injected to trigger migration and homing of CSCs-ECCs to the ischemic area. The impact of this intervention on myocardial regeneration, heart function, and animal survival was determined acutely, at healing and long thereafter to evaluate its therapeutic efficacy.
| Materials and Methods |
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| Results |
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-sarcomeric actin or cardiac myosin, representing myocyte precursors. SMC progenitors and precursors expressed GATA-6 and
-smooth muscle actin and EC progenitors and precursors Ets-1 and von Willebrand factor, respectively (supplemental Figure S2).
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c-Met and IGF-1R
Most CSCs-ECCs expressed c-Met and IGF-1 receptor together with HGF and IGF-1 (supplemental Figure S3). Migration studies documented that HGF had a chemoattractive effect on CSCs-ECCs that peaked at 100 ng/mL. Invasion assays showed that 100 ng/mL HGF increased by 7-fold the number of CSCs-ECCs that accumulated in the lower well of a modified Boyden chamber. IGF-1 had few motogenic and invasive properties (supplemental Figure S4). After HGF administration, CSCs-ECCs had gelatinolytic activity and secreted MMP-2 and MMP-9; IGF-1 had little effects on MMPs (Figure 1E).
IGF-1 and HGF decreased apoptosis of CSCs-ECCs in serum-free medium by 94% and 58%, respectively. Moreover, BrdUPOS CSCs-ECCs increased 11-fold with IGF-1 and 3-fold with HGF. The effects of both GFs on cell death and growth were not different from those of IGF-1 alone (supplemental Figure S5). Murine mRNA and protein for IGF-1 and HGF were present in non-stimulated CSCs-ECCs and increased in GF-treated infarcted-hearts (Figure 1H). Animals were injected with heterologous proteins, human IGF-1, and HGF.
HGF and IGF-1 in the supernatant of GF-stimulated CSCs-ECCs in serum-free medium increased from 30 minutes to 120 minutes, reaching a 13-fold and 26-fold elevation at 120 minutes, respectively (Figure 1F). The increase in murine HGF and IGF-1 mRNA, together with the significant accumulation of murine HGF and IGF-1 protein in stimulated CSCs-ECCs in vivo, supports the notion that CSCs-ECCs can synthesize these GFs. The time-dependent increase in the secretion of HGF and IGF-1 in vitro strengthens this conclusion. Thus, CSCs-ECCs possess the c-Met-HGF and IGF-1 receptor-IGF-1 systems that promote cell growth and migration, attenuate apoptosis, and increase the secretion of their ligands.
Migration of CSCs-ECCs
Because cycling CSCs-ECCs were identified in the atrioventricular (AV) groove (supplemental Figures S6 and S7), a retrovirus expressing enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP)1,5 was injected in this region to label replicating cells before the administration of the GFs. Integration and accumulation of EGFP in the tagged cells required
48 hours (supplemental Figure S8). Therefore, coronary occlusion was performed 2 days after viral inoculation, and HGF and/or IGF-1 were injected 5 hours later (supplemental Figure S9). Increasing doses of HGF were used between the AV groove and the infarct to favor migration of CSCs-ECCs to the infarct. Fluorescein-conjugated HGF was injected to establish its distribution; fluorescence intensity was higher adjacent to the infarct than in the distant myocardium (Figure 2A through 2C). As shown by ELISA, HGF quantity was also higher in the border than in the remote tissue (Figure 2D). Autocatalytic phosphorylation of c-Met and IGF-1R, phospho-Akt, phospho-IRS-1, and phospho-FAK in c-kitPOS CSCs-ECCs showed that these indices of c-Met and IGF-1 receptor activation were barely detectable in untreated hearts. Conversely, their expression in CSCs-ECCs from GF-treated infarcts increased with time (Figure 2E). Phospho-FAK and phospho-c-Met were also detected by immunocytochemistry (data not shown) and fluorescent-activated cell sorter (Figure 2F). Antibody specificity was determined by fluorescent-activated cell sorter, and immunoprecipitation Western blotting of Lewis lung carcinoma cells (Figure 2G and 2H).
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The effects of GFs on cell migration were evaluated ex vivo. Microscopic fields were analyzed for 1 to 5 hours to measure movement of EGFPPOS cells (Figure 3A through 3E). The same EGFPPOS cells were then characterized after fixation: EGFPPOS cells expressed antigens typical of CSCs-ECCs (Figure 3F and 3G; supplemental Figure S10). EGFPPOS cells, which were not CSCs-ECCs, were occasionally seen in the AV groove; these cells did not move after GF administration. EGFPPOS CSCs-ECCs migrated at
70 µm/h (supplemental Figure S11) from the AV groove to the border and central infarct in 2 to 3 and 6 to 7 hours, respectively. IGF-1 had minimal effect on locomotion. In GF-treated infarcts, the number of EGFPPOS CSCs-ECCs and EGFPPOS-EGFPNEG CSCs-ECCs in this region increased 3-fold and 8-fold, respectively (supplemental Figure S12). Most CSCs-ECCs expressed both c-Met and IGF-1 receptor and were committed to cardiac lineages (supplemental Figure S13 and S14).
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Destiny of CSCs-ECCs
CSCs-ECCs can migrate via the coronary bed, the interstitium, or both. Therefore, the coronary circulation was perfused with rhodamine-labeled dextran, and GFs were administrated at the time of observation. The coronary vasculature was recognized by red fluorescence and EGFPPOS cells by green fluorescence (Figure 4A through 4D; supplemental Figure S15). In all cases, EGFPPOS cells were located outside the vessels, suggesting that the coronary circulation was not implicated in cell migration; EGFPPOS cells were found in interstitial tunnels defined by fibronectin (Figure 4E).
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The death, survival, and growth of CSCs-ECCs within the infarct was characterized (supplemental Figures S16 through S19) together with the differentiation of EGFPPOS CSCs-ECCs in the early stages of myocardial restoration. In the absence of GFs, CSCs-ECCs within the infarct died rapidly, whereas the presence of GFs promoted their survival and replication. Moreover, a time-dependent increase in the number of c-kitPOS, MDR1POS, and Sca-1POS cells undergoing the transition from undifferentiated cells to small myocytes was detected. At 1 day, EGFPPOS cells expressed stem cell antigens and MEF2C, but sarcomeric proteins were absent. At 2 days, cells were positive for sarcomeric myosin and at 3 to 4 days had developed into small EGFPPOS myocytes. Connexin 43 and N-cadherin were present (Figure 5A and 5B). These cells, clustered in patches throughout the infarct, increased with time (Figure 5C). At 1 to 2 days, new arterioles had thick walls and ill-defined lumen. At 3 to 4 days, arterioles and capillaries increased; they were formed by EGFPPOS and EGFPNEG cells (supplemental Figure S20).
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GFs and Infarct Size
Myocardial infarction rates in GF-treated hearts at 16 days and 4 months were 67% and 63%, respectively. Corresponding values in untreated mice were 42% and 43%. Thus, infarct size was 60% and 47% larger in GF-treated than in untreated mice at the early and late time point, respectively (supplemental Figure S21). This unexpected result was the consequence of a rapid regeneration of dead myocardium induced by GFs, which rescued animals with extremely large infarcts acutely after coronary occlusion. Figure 6A illustrates a 44% infarct, a nearly maximum infarct size compatible with survival in untreated mice at 16 days. The infarct corresponds to a loss of 1.6 million myocytes from a total of 3.6 million. GF-treated mice survived infarcts of 82% (Figure 6B) and 86%; this is a striking result, as 2.9 and 3.1 million myocytes were lost, respectively.
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The group of untreated infarcted mice consisted of 123 animals (supplemental Table S1). The 87 animals that died 10 hours to 15 days after surgery had infarctions of 57% to 82%. Twenty-two of the remaining 36 were euthanized at 16 days, and 15 were studied functionally and structurally. The group of GF-treated infarcted mice consisted of 107 animals. The 46 animals that died 10 hours to 15 days after surgery had infarctions of 63% to 79%. Forty-nine of the remaining 61 were euthanized at 16 days, and 26 were studied. None of untreated mice survived 16 days with infarcts larger than 60%. Conversely, 14 of 22 mice in the GF-treated group survived 16 days with infarcts greater than 60%, and 7 had 75% to 86% infarcts. Of the remaining 14 untreated infarcted mice, 10 survived 4 months and only 1 had an infarct that reached 50%. Of the remaining 12 GF-treated infarcted animals, 10 survived 4 months, and 6 had infarcts greater than 60% (Figure 6C; 68%). Thus, GF-treatment saved mice with infarcts that are typically fatal.
Myocardial Regeneration
Four of 26 GF-treated mice euthanized at 16 days did not respond to GF administration; they were undistinguishable from untreated infarcted mice. Most likely, they were not properly injected with GFs. Similarly, 2 of 10 GF-treated mice at 4 months had no regenerating band. Thus, successful treatment was obtained in 85% and 80% of treated mice. Unsuccessfully treated mice were characterized structurally (supplemental Table S2).
In untreated mice, the infarcts consisted of collagen type I and III (Figure 6A). In treated mice, the regenerated myocardium occupied 65±8% and 73±7% of the infarct at 16 days (Figure 6B) and 4 months (Figure 6C), respectively. The new band of myocardium was located in the mid-portion of the wall and, in some cases, replaced the entire wall thickness (Figure 6B and 6C). At 16 days, the new myocardium recovered 15% of the infarct, decreasing the infarct size from 67% to 57%. At 4 months, the formed myocardium accounted for 54% of the infarct, reducing infarct size from 63% to 29% (supplemental Figure S22).
The regenerated myocardium was composed of myocytes and coronary vessels. At 16 days, myocytes varied in volume from 600 to 7200 µm3 and at 4 months, from 700 to 20 000 µm3 (Figure 6D). At both intervals, treated hearts generated an average 3.2 million myocytes to compensate for a loss of 2.2 million. There were 43±13 arterioles and 155±48 capillaries/mm2 at 16 days, and 31±6 arterioles and 390±56 capillaries at 4 months. For comparison, there are
10 arterioles and
3500 capillaries/mm2 in myocardium in the adult heart. New vessels contained erythrocytes (supplemental Figure S23).
To document that cells in the band were formed after infarction, mice were exposed to BrdU; 84±9% and 94±3% myocytes and vessels in the band were BrdUPOS at 16 days and 4 months, respectively (Figure 6E and 6F; supplemental Figure S23). At 4 months, the spared myocardium adjacent to and distant from the infarct had 17±6% and 8±3% BrdUPOS myocyte nuclei, respectively (supplemental Figure S24). New myocytes were smaller than adult myocytes (21 800±2200 µm3) but expressed nestin, desmin, myosin,
-sarcomeric actin, N-cadherin, and connexin 43 (supplemental Figure S25). These results indicate that, in response to HGF and IGF-1, CSCs-ECCs translocate, grow, and differentiate, resulting in significant myocardial regeneration. A single GF had a smaller impact, however, and the 2 GFs acted synergistically in cardiac repair (supplemental Figure S26).
Myocyte Mechanics and Cell Fusion
Myocytes were isolated from regenerated and spared myocardium (Figure 7A through 7F) of GF-treated hearts at 16 days, and their contractile behavior was determined. New cells were smaller than old cells, had BrdUPOS nuclei, and resembled neonatal myocytes. Connexin 43 and N-cadherin were detected (Figure 7C through 7F). In comparison with surviving myocytes, new cells exhibited higher peak shortening and velocity of shortening and relengthening (Figure 7G; supplemental Figure S27).
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The discrepancy in size between old and new myocytes makes it unlikely that fusion1,14 of the activated CSCs with spared myocytes was implicated in the differentiation of these cells into myocytes. Moreover, to rule out fusion of CSCs with other cells, the number of X chromosomes was evaluated in the regenerated myocytes of the female infarcted treated mice. At most, 2 X chromosomes were detected in the nuclei, strongly arguing against cell fusion (Figure 7H). Cycling and noncycling new and old myocytes were identified by Ki67, and DNA content was measured in individual nuclei. Mouse lymphocytes were used as control. Nuclei of noncycling myocytes and lymphocytes had 2C DNA content, whereas Ki67POS nuclei had DNA content intermediately between diploid and tetraploid excluding cell fusion (supplemental Figure S28).
Cardiac Performance and Survival
Contraction in the infarct of GF-treated mice reappeared at 15 days and improved at 1, 3, and 4 -months (Figure 8A through 8E). Hemodynamics improved in GF-treated mice and deteriorated in untreated mice (Figure 8F). In GF-treated hearts, from 16 days to 4 months, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure decreased and LV-developed pressure and dP/dt increased. Also, chamber volume decreased, attenuating diastolic stress (Figure 8F). Together, these variables were responsible for a 34% decrease in animal mortality (Figure 8G), despite
50% larger infarcts in GF-treated animals. Thus, activation of CSCs-ECCs acutely after infarction elicits a sustained regenerative response that ameliorates the anatomy and function of the heart, improving animal survival.
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| Discussion |
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CSCs-ECCs in the Adult Heart
The fact that the heart possesses a stem cell compartment has been shown in several species,14,15,16 including large animals17 and humans.6,7,18 With one exception,16 these cells have been characterized by the expression of the ypical stem cell antigens c-kit, MDR1 or Sca-1. However, the fact that cardiac primitive cells are self-renewing, clonogenic, and multipotent, which are the critical variables for the definition of a stem cell, has been documented only in rats1 and dogs.17 Because of this inevitable premise, it is difficult to reconcile the claim made and terminology used when cells already committed to the myocyte lineage and without established epitopes have been interpreted as a novel class of cardiac stem cells.16 Importantly, the majority of CSCs in dogs,17 humans,7 and here in the mouse heart expresses together c-kit, MDR1, and Sca-1like proteins. Additionally, these stem cell antigens are not associated with a significant difference in the ability of these primitive cells to acquire the myocyte, endothelial, and smooth muscle cell lineage in vitro17 and in vivo.7,17 The latter has been confirmed in the mouse heart. The ability of clonogenic c-kitPOS cells to create myocardial cells in vitro, however, is several-fold greater than cells expressing MDR1, Sca-1like protein. or c-kit, MDR1. and Sca-1 together.17 Whether this in vitro property of c-kitPOS cells has a comparable in vivo counterpart remains an unanswered question.
The Infarcted Heart
Post-infarction cardiomyopathy is the major cause of heart failure, and the current observations offer new insights concerning the onset and evolution of this disease. On the basis of the present results, the progressive nature of ischemic cardiomyopathy appears to be dictated by the inability of CSCs-ECCs to translocate and home to the infarcted myocardium rather than by limitations in the growth reserve of the damaged heart. The resident stem cells distributed in the infarcted region do not survive the ischemic event and die by apoptosis and necrosis in a manner identical to that of myocytes and coronary vessels. CSCs-ECCs are not capable of opposing the death signals activated by permanent coronary occlusion and initiate regenerative growth within the infarcted myocardium. Moreover, these primitive cells cannot escape replicative senescence with severe telomeric shortening and activation of the death program in end-stage failure7 or premature myocardial aging19 in humans. Spontaneous myocardial regeneration within acute infarcts, however, appears to be mediated by CSCS-ECCs, which undergo lineage commitment and differentiation.7 With some exceptions,7 tissue growth does not invade and replace the infarcted myocardium but is restricted to the noninfarcted portion of the ventricular wall.20 This is not a peculiar limitation of the heart. Stem cells are efficient in maintaining organ homeostasis but do not prevent the formation of a scar after artery occlusion in the intestine, skin, brain, liver, kidney, and the bone marrow.21,22
Consistent with previous observations of cardiac repair,1,5,17 early myocardial regeneration is characterized by the formation of immature parenchymal cells and coronary vessels that resemble the fetal heart. Cardiomyocytes, resistance arterioles, and capillary structures mature with time, but only
20% of myocytes reach the adult phenotype and have a volume of 10 000 to 20 000 µm3 4 months after successful treatment (Figure 6D). This is at variance with the process of postnatal development, as myocytes acquire adult characteristics at 3 to 4 weeks after birth. Interestingly, scattered regeneration of myocytes in the surviving myocardium after infarction results in the formation of parenchymal cells that are indistinguishable from the preexisting partners.5 This observation has led to the conclusion that contact with differentiated cells and paracrine factors may be implicated in the destiny of lineage-committed CSCs-ECCs.
On the basis of the belief that the heart lacks endogenous regenerative capacity, early strategies of cardiac repair have used the colonization of the myocardium with exogenous cells.23 The presence of CSCs raises the unique prospect of reconstituting dead myocardium after infarction, repopulating the hypertrophic decompensated heart with new, better-functioning cells and vascular structures, and, perhaps, restoring the physiological and anatomical characteristics of the normal heart. These possibilities have formed the basis of a new paradigm in which the heart is viewed as a dynamic organ that constantly renews its cell populations and has the inherent ability to reconstitute tissue. Understanding cardiac homeostasis would offer the extraordinary opportunity to potentiate this naturally occurring process and promote myocardial repair after injury.24
Rescue of the Infarcted Heart
So far, experimental studies and clinical trials have used rather heterogeneous bone marrow cell populations to regenerate infarcted myocardium and have consistently shown an improvement in function of the infarcted heart.23 However, the most logical and potentially powerful cell to be uses is the CSC. It is intuitively apparent that if the adult heart possesses a pool of primitive multipotent cells, these cells have to be tested first before more complex and unknown cells are explored. The attraction of this approach is its simplicity. Cells from other organs are not programmed to give rise to cardiomyocytes and coronary vessels, and transdifferentiation requires nuclear reprogramming with chromatin reorganization. This is a time-consuming process25 that delays the formation of alternate progeny, affecting the onset and efficiency of myocardial regeneration. Conversely, the intramyocardial injection of GFs promotes the translocation of CSCs-ECCs to the damaged area and activates their growth and differentiation, resulting in the formation of functionally competent myocardium. The blunted response to HGF or IGF-1 emphasizes the need for a dual stimulation of CSCs-ECCs: The survival and growth provided by IGF-1 together with the chemotactic effects of HGF. The presence of small new myocytes within the infarct at 1 to 2 days after coronary ligation demonstrates that tissue reconstitution is an immediate reaction that restores an amount of myocardium larger than any other reported so far in the long term.
At variance with previous strategies,23 local GF administration benefited animals with infarcts that are typically fatal. However, these results leave unanswered the question of why ischemia does not activate stem cells locally, favoring their homing to the damaged area, or whether the effects of GFs on ischemic myocytes influenced cell viability. Myocardial ischemia is a potent inducer of IGF-126 and HGF.27 The injection of GFs did not increase the number of bone marrow progenitor cells in the circulation, as shown by the lack of changes in the pool of CD45 and c-kitPOS cells in the peripheral blood (supplemental Figure S29); 240 µg of HGF over a period of 12 days was required to produce a modest increase in circulating BMPCs.28 This quantity is 170 000-fold higher than the 1.4 ng given here at a single time point (limitations; online).
Cell Migration
The locomotion of CSCs-ECCs occurs through the myocardial interstitium independently from the coronary circulation. CSCs-ECCs traverse in vitro a 3-dimensional substrate of Matrigel and in vivo dense barriers of collagen type I and III. MMP-2 and MMP-9 appear to be the proteolytic enzymes responsible for the invasive phenotype of CSCs-ECCs and their trafficking across the myocardial interstitium. However, MMP-9 may trigger the release of stem cell factor29 from CSCs-ECCs, although stem cell factor has no effects on the invasive properties of these cells in vitro.17
The migratory elements of CSCs-ECCs may include motogenic factors, and ischemia is a potent inducer of the chemoattractants HGF, stromal cell-derived factor-1, and vascular endothelial growth factor. Although these cytokines may favor cell movement, it is only with HGF that waves of CSCs-ECCs are engaged in a directional migration toward the injured myocardium. A stop signal may also be present to promote the accumulation of cells within the infarct. This involves the extracellular substrates used by the cells to traverse the interstitium. The ability of CSCs-ECCs to degrade extracellular matrix provides a basis for the tunnel tracks found in the myocardium. CSCs-ECCs adhere to the wall of fibronectin that delimit the interstitial channels. Importantly, fibronectin is implicated in the migration of c-kitPOS cells.30 Finally, the directional locomotion of cells is regulated by guidance factors. Ligand-receptor systems are potential candidates for defining the trajectory of migrating CSCs-ECCs and, in our conditions, the activation of c-Met by HGF may be the determinant element. MMPs, together with the HGF-mediated changes in integrin phenotype of CSCs-ECCs (A.L., unpublished data), may be crucial for effective translocation of cells. Other systems, including the c-Met-related family of semaphorins and neuropilins, are likely to be involved. The long journey of a stem cell toward its final destination, however, remains an intriguing and mysterious event.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Original received May 25, 2005; revision received August 11, 2005; accepted August 11, 2005.
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X. Wang, M. N. Jameel, Q. Li, A. Mansoor, X. Qiang, C. Swingen, C. Panetta, and J. Zhang Stem Cells for Myocardial Repair With Use of a Transarterial Catheter Circulation, September 15, 2009; 120(11_suppl_1): S238 - S246. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Deuse, C. Peter, P. W.M. Fedak, T. Doyle, H. Reichenspurner, W. H. Zimmermann, T. Eschenhagen, W. Stein, J. C. Wu, R. C. Robbins, et al. Hepatocyte Growth Factor or Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Gene Transfer Maximizes Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Based Myocardial Salvage After Acute Myocardial Infarction Circulation, September 15, 2009; 120(11_suppl_1): S247 - S254. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Lu, H. K. Haider, S. Jiang, and M. Ashraf Sca-1+ Stem Cell Survival and Engraftment in the Infarcted Heart: Dual Role for Preconditioning-Induced Connexin-43 Circulation, May 19, 2009; 119(19): 2587 - 2596. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. J. Gavira, G. Abizanda, M. Perez-Ilzarbe, D. Martinez-Caro, E. Nasarre, A. Perez-Ruiz, and F. Prosper Skeletal myoblasts for cardiac repair in animal models Eur. Heart J. Suppl., December 1, 2008; 10(suppl_K): K11 - K15. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Ota, T. W. Gilbert, D. Schwartzman, C. F. McTiernan, T. Kitajima, Y. Ito, Y. Sawa, S. F. Badylak, and M. A. Zenati A fusion protein of hepatocyte growth factor enhances reconstruction of myocardium in a cardiac patch derived from porcine urinary bladder matrix. J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg., November 1, 2008; 136(5): 1309 - 1317. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Perez-Ilzarbe, O. Agbulut, B. Pelacho, C. Ciorba, E. S. Jose-Eneriz, M. Desnos, A. A. Hagege, P. Aranda, E. J. Andreu, P. Menasche, et al. Characterization of the paracrine effects of human skeletal myoblasts transplanted in infarcted myocardium Eur J Heart Fail, November 1, 2008; 10(11): 1065 - 1072. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Rota, M. E. Padin-Iruegas, Y. Misao, A. De Angelis, S. Maestroni, J. Ferreira-Martins, E. Fiumana, R. Rastaldo, M. L. Arcarese, T. S. Mitchell, et al. Local Activation or Implantation of Cardiac Progenitor Cells Rescues Scarred Infarcted Myocardium Improving Cardiac Function Circ. Res., July 3, 2008; 103(1): 107 - 116. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. S. Penn and A. A. Mangi Genetic Enhancement of Stem Cell Engraftment, Survival, and Efficacy Circ. Res., June 20, 2008; 102(12): 1471 - 1482. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. A. Gude, G. Emmanuel, W. Wu, C. T. Cottage, K. Fischer, P. Quijada, J. A. Muraski, R. Alvarez, M. Rubio, E. Schaefer, et al. Activation of Notch-Mediated Protective Signaling in the Myocardium Circ. Res., May 9, 2008; 102(9): 1025 - 1035. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Z. Ungvari, C. Parrado-Fernandez, A. Csiszar, and R. de Cabo Mechanisms Underlying Caloric Restriction and Lifespan Regulation: Implications for Vascular Aging Circ. Res., March 14, 2008; 102(5): 519 - 528. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J.-Y. Hahn, H.-J. Cho, H.-J. Kang, T.-S. Kim, M.-H. Kim, J.-H. Chung, J.-W. Bae, B.-H. Oh, Y.-B. Park, and H.-S. Kim Pre-treatment of mesenchymal stem cells with a combination of growth factors enhances gap junction formation, cytoprotective effect on cardiomyocytes, and therapeutic efficacy for myocardial infarction. J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., March 4, 2008; 51(9): 933 - 943. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. R. Crisostomo, Y. Wang, T. A. Markel, M. Wang, T. Lahm, and D. R. Meldrum Human mesenchymal stem cells stimulated by TNF-{alpha}, LPS, or hypoxia produce growth factors by an NF{kappa}B- but not JNK-dependent mechanism Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, March 1, 2008; 294(3): C675 - C682. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Tillmanns, M. Rota, T. Hosoda, Y. Misao, G. Esposito, A. Gonzalez, S. Vitale, C. Parolin, S. Yasuzawa-Amano, J. Muraski, et al. Formation of large coronary arteries by cardiac progenitor cells PNAS, February 5, 2008; 105(5): 1668 - 1673. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Esaki, G. Takemura, K.-i. Kosai, T. Takahashi, S. Miyata, L. Li, K. Goto, R. Maruyama, H. Okada, H. Kanamori, et al. Treatment with an adenoviral vector encoding hepatocyte growth factor mitigates established cardiac dysfunction in doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, February 1, 2008; 294(2): H1048 - H1057. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H.-J. Cho, N. Lee, J. Y. Lee, Y. J. Choi, M. Ii, A. Wecker, J.-O. Jeong, C. Curry, G. Qin, and Y.-s. Yoon Role of host tissues for sustained humoral effects after endothelial progenitor cell transplantation into the ischemic heart J. Exp. Med., December 24, 2007; 204(13): 3257 - 3269. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. Limana, A. Zacheo, D. Mocini, A. Mangoni, G. Borsellino, A. Diamantini, R. De Mori, L. Battistini, E. Vigna, M. Santini, et al. Identification of Myocardial and Vascular Precursor Cells in Human and Mouse Epicardium Circ. Res., December 7, 2007; 101(12): 1255 - 1265. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. R. Sipido and S. P. Janssens How Old Is Your Heart? Circ. Res., August 17, 2007; 101(4): 323 - 325. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. P. Santini, L. Tsao, L. Monassier, C. Theodoropoulos, J. Carter, E. Lara-Pezzi, E. Slonimsky, E. Salimova, P. Delafontaine, Y.-H. Song, et al. Enhancing Repair of the Mammalian Heart Circ. Res., June 22, 2007; 100(12): 1732 - 1740. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Tateishi, E. Ashihara, N. Takehara, T. Nomura, S. Honsho, T. Nakagami, S. Morikawa, T. Takahashi, T. Ueyama, H. Matsubara, et al. Clonally amplified cardiac stem cells are regulated by Sca-1 signaling for efficient cardiovascular regeneration J. Cell Sci., May 15, 2007; 120(10): 1791 - 1800. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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V. L.T. Ballard and J. M. Edelberg Stem Cells and the Regeneration of the Aging Cardiovascular System Circ. Res., April 27, 2007; 100(8): 1116 - 1127. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Zeng, Q. Hu, X. Wang, A. Mansoor, J. Lee, J. Feygin, G. Zhang, P. Suntharalingam, S. Boozer, A. Mhashilkar, et al. Bioenergetic and Functional Consequences of Bone Marrow-Derived Multipotent Progenitor Cell Transplantation in Hearts With Postinfarction Left Ventricular Remodeling Circulation, April 10, 2007; 115(14): 1866 - 1875. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. Ahuja, P. Sdek, and W. R. MacLellan Cardiac Myocyte Cell Cycle Control in Development, Disease, and Regeneration Physiol Rev, April 1, 2007; 87(2): 521 - 544. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. R. Smith, L. Barile, H. C. Cho, M. K. Leppo, J. M. Hare, E. Messina, A. Giacomello, M. R. Abraham, and E. Marban Regenerative Potential of Cardiosphere-Derived Cells Expanded From Percutaneous Endomyocardial Biopsy Specimens Circulation, February 20, 2007; 115(7): 896 - 908. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Thum, S. Hoeber, S. Froese, I. Klink, D. O. Stichtenoth, P. Galuppo, M. Jakob, D. Tsikas, S. D. Anker, P. A. Poole-Wilson, et al. Age-Dependent Impairment of Endothelial Progenitor Cells Is Corrected by Growth Hormone Mediated Increase of Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 Circ. Res., February 16, 2007; 100(3): 434 - 443. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. Giacobini, A. Messina, S. Wray, C. Giampietro, T. Crepaldi, P. Carmeliet, and A. Fasolo Hepatocyte Growth Factor Acts as a Motogen and Guidance Signal for Gonadotropin Hormone-Releasing Hormone-1 Neuronal Migration J. Neurosci., January 10, 2007; 27(2): 431 - 445. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. A. Pallante, I. Duignan, D. Okin, A. Chin, M. C. Bressan, T. Mikawa, and J. M. Edelberg Bone Marrow Oct3/4+ Cells Differentiate Into Cardiac Myocytes via Age-Dependent Paracrine Mechanisms Circ. Res., January 5, 2007; 100(1): e1 - e11. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Germani, F. Limana, and M. C. Capogrossi Pivotal Advances: High-mobility group box 1 protein--a cytokine with a role in cardiac repair J. Leukoc. Biol., January 1, 2007; 81(1): 41 - 45. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. F. Rosenberg and J. J. Oppenheim Interview with Dr. Maurizio C. Capogrossi regarding Pivotal Advance: High-mobility group box 1 protein--a cytokine with a role in cardiac repair J. Leukoc. Biol., January 1, 2007; 81(1): 38 - 40. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Yamabi, H. Lu, X. Dai, Y. Lu, G. Hannigan, and J. G. Coles Overexpression of integrin-linked kinase induces cardiac stem cell expansion J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg., December 1, 2006; 132(6): 1272 - 1279. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. Hilfiker-Kleiner, U. Landmesser, and H. Drexler Molecular Mechanisms in Heart Failure: Focus on Cardiac Hypertrophy, Inflammation, Angiogenesis, and Apoptosis J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., October 27, 2006; 48(9_Suppl_A): A56 - A66. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Wang, P. R. Crisostomo, C. Herring, K. K. Meldrum, and D. R. Meldrum Human progenitor cells from bone marrow or adipose tissue produce VEGF, HGF, and IGF-I in response to TNF by a p38 MAPK-dependent mechanism Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, October 1, 2006; 291(4): R880 - R884. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Gude, J. Muraski, M. Rubio, J. Kajstura, E. Schaefer, P. Anversa, and M. A. Sussman Akt Promotes Increased Cardiomyocyte Cycling and Expansion of the Cardiac Progenitor Cell Population Circ. Res., August 18, 2006; 99(4): 381 - 388. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H.-J. Cho and Y.-s. Yoon Synergism of Hematopoietic Cytokines for Infarct Repair Circ. Res., April 28, 2006; 98(8): 990 - 992. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. Anversa, J. Kajstura, A. Leri, and R. Bolli Life and Death of Cardiac Stem Cells: A Paradigm Shift in Cardiac Biology Circulation, March 21, 2006; 113(11): 1451 - 1463. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Nagai, I. Shiojima, K. Matsuura, and I. Komuro Promotion of Cardiac Regeneration by Cardiac Stem Cells Circ. Res., September 30, 2005; 97(7): 615 - 617. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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