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Content Provider | World Health Organization (WHO)-Global Index Medicus |
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Author | Iaffaldano, Grazia Kajstura, Jan Urbanek, Konrad Padin-iruegas, M. Elena Vitale, Serena Chen, Xiongwen Hosoda, Toru Bolli, Roberto Gonzalez, Arantxa Esposito, Grazia Anversa, Piero Muraski, John Rizzi, Roberto Leri, Annarosa Small, Narissa Bearzi, Claudia Sussman, Mark A. Rota, Marcello Alvarez, Roberto Houser, Steven R. |
Description | Author Affiliation: Rota M ( Cardiovascular Research Institute, Department of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA.); |
Abstract | The possibility that adult bone marrow cells (BMCs) retain a remarkable degree of developmental plasticity and acquire the cardiomyocyte lineage after infarction has been challenged, and the notion of BMC transdifferentiation has been questioned. The center of the controversy is the lack of unequivocal evidence in favor of myocardial regeneration by the injection of BMCs in the infarcted heart. Because of the interest in cell-based therapy for heart failure, several approaches including gene reporter assay, genetic tagging, cell genotyping, PCR-based detection of donor genes, and direct immunofluorescence with quantum dots were used to prove or disprove BMC transdifferentiation. Our results indicate that BMCs engraft, survive, and grow within the spared myocardium after infarction by forming junctional complexes with resident myocytes. BMCs and myocytes express at their interface connexin 43 and N-cadherin, and this interaction may be critical for BMCs to adopt the cardiomyogenic fate. With time, a large number of myocytes and coronary vessels are generated. Myocytes show a diploid DNA content and carry, at most, two sex chromosomes. Old and new myocytes show synchronicity in calcium transients, providing strong evidence in favor of the functional coupling of these two cell populations. Thus, BMCs transdifferentiate and acquire the cardiomyogenic and vascular phenotypes restoring the infarcted heart. Together, our studies reveal that locally delivered BMCs generate de novo myocardium composed of integrated cardiomyocytes and coronary vessels. This process occurs independently of cell fusion and ameliorates structurally and functionally the outcome of the heart after infarction. |
ISSN | 00278424 |
e-ISSN | 10916490 |
Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
Issue Number | 45 |
Volume Number | 104 |
Language | English |
Publisher | National Academy of Sciences |
Publisher Date | 2007-11-01 |
Publisher Place | United States |
Access Restriction | Open |
Subject Keyword | Bone Marrow Cells Cytology Cell Differentiation Physiology Myocytes, Cardiac Stem Cell Transplantation Antigens, CD Antigens, CD45 Cell Division DNA Genetics Diploidy Myocardial Infarction Therapy Regeneration Tissue Donors Multidisciplinary |
Content Type | Text |
Resource Type | Article |
Subject | Multidisciplinary |
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