Human cardiac stem cells

Claudia Bearzi(New York Medical College), Marcello Rota(New York Medical College), Toru Hosoda(New York Medical College), Jochen Tillmanns(New York Medical College), Angelo Nascimbene(New York Medical College), Antonella De Angelis(New York Medical College), Saori Yasuzawa-Amano(New York Medical College), Ирина Трофимова(New York Medical College), Robert W. Siggins(New York Medical College), Nicole LeCapitaine(New York Medical College), Stefano Cascapera(New York Medical College), Antonio Paolo Beltrami(New York Medical College), David A. D’Alessandro(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Elias Zias(New York Medical College), Federico Quaini(New York Medical College), Konrad Urbanek(New York Medical College), Robert E. Michler(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Roberto Bolli(University of Louisville), Jan Kajstura(New York Medical College), Annarosa Leri(New York Medical College), Piero Anversa(New York Medical College)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 21, 2007
Cited by 975Open Access
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Abstract

The identification of cardiac progenitor cells in mammals raises the possibility that the human heart contains a population of stem cells capable of generating cardiomyocytes and coronary vessels. The characterization of human cardiac stem cells (hCSCs) would have important clinical implications for the management of the failing heart. We have established the conditions for the isolation and expansion of c-kit-positive hCSCs from small samples of myocardium. Additionally, we have tested whether these cells have the ability to form functionally competent human myocardium after infarction in immunocompromised animals. Here, we report the identification in vitro of a class of human c-kit-positive cardiac cells that possess the fundamental properties of stem cells: they are self-renewing, clonogenic, and multipotent. hCSCs differentiate predominantly into cardiomyocytes and, to a lesser extent, into smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells. When locally injected in the infarcted myocardium of immunodeficient mice and immunosuppressed rats, hCSCs generate a chimeric heart, which contains human myocardium composed of myocytes, coronary resistance arterioles, and capillaries. The human myocardium is structurally and functionally integrated with the rodent myocardium and contributes to the performance of the infarcted heart. Differentiated human cardiac cells possess only one set of human sex chromosomes excluding cell fusion. The lack of cell fusion was confirmed by the Cre-lox strategy. Thus, hCSCs can be isolated and expanded in vitro for subsequent autologous regeneration of dead myocardium in patients affected by heart failure of ischemic and nonischemic origin.


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