|
February
9, 2005
Team Discovers Specialized, Rare Heart Stem Cells
In Newborns, With Potential for Replacing Damaged Tissue
By Sue Pondrom
The first evidence
of cardiac progenitor cells – rare, specialized stem cells
located in the newborn heart of rats, mice and humans –
has been shown by researchers at the UCSD School of Medicine.
The cells are capable of differentiation into fully mature heart
tissue.
Called isl1+ cells,
these cardiac progenitor cells are stem cells that have been
programmed to form heart muscle during fetal growth. Until this
new discovery, the cells were thought to be absent after birth.
However, the UCSD team discovered a small number of the specialized
stem cells remained embedded in a region of the newborn heart
called the atrium. They also determined that the cells could
be expanded into millions of progenitor cells by growing them
on a layer of neighboring heart cells called fibroblasts.
Published in the February
10, 2005 issue of the journal Nature, the research
identified the isl1+ progenitor cells in the tissue of newborn
rats and mice, and then in heart tissue taken from five newborn
human babies undergoing surgery for congenital heart defects.
Study author Sylvia
Evans, Ph.D., a member of the UCSD Institute of Molecular Medicine
(IMM) and professor of pharmacology, and co-first author Alessandra
Moretti, Ph.D., IMM member, explained that the cells are programmed
to become spontaneously beating cardiac muscle cells simply
by exposure to other neighboring heart cells.
And, since these rare
cardiac progenitor cells are found in regions of the atrium
that are normally discarded during routine cardiac surgery,
the discovery raises the possibility that an individual could
receive their own cardiac stem cells to correct a wide spectrum
of pediatric cardiac diseases, according to co-first authors
Moretti and Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz, M.D., a Heisenberg-Scholar
of the German Research Foundation.
“Conceptually,
these cells could provide a cell-therapy based approach to pediatric
cardiac disease, which is new for cardiology,” said the
study’s senior author, Kenneth Chien, M.D., Ph.D., director
of the UCSD Institute of Molecular Medicine. “Traditionally,
pediatric cardiologists and cardiac surgeons have relied on
mechanical devices, human and synthetic tissue grafts, and artificial
and animal derived valves to surgically repair heart defects.
While progenitor cells won’t grow a whole new heart, our
research has shown that they can spontaneously become cells
from specific parts of the heart by simple co-exposure to other
heart cells, which could augment existing surgical procedures.
If the cells maintain pacemaker function when placed in the
intact heart, they might serve as biological pacemakers for
infants born with heart block, which could also be valuable.”
After the isl1+ cells
were found in newborn rats, the UCSD team used sophisticated
genetic methods to tag the progenitor cells in living embryonic
tissue and in the newborn heart of mice. With these techniques,
they were able to show that the isl1+ progenitor cells were
spontaneously able to form cardiac muscle tissue.
“Furthermore,
the cardiac muscle cells formed were totally mature and had
the complete array of function that one would expect in completely
differentiated heart tissue,” said the study’s co-first
author Jason Lam, Ph.D. candidate in the IMM. The cells exhibited
contractility, pumping ability, the correct electrical physiology
and normal heart structure. In addition, the progenitor cells
coupled with neighboring cardiac muscle cells with resulting
normal electrical heart beats.
“Another important
discovery was the ability to expand the few cells found in a
newborn heart, into millions of cells in lab culture dishes,”
Laugwitz said. “This implies that the isl1+ cells potentially
could be harvested from an individual’s heart tissue,
multiplied in a laboratory setting, then re-implanted into the
patient. Furthermore, the developmental lineage marker which
identifies undifferentiated cardiogenic precursors suggests
the feasibility of isolating isl1+ cardiac progenitors from
mouse and human embryonic stem cell systems during cardiogenesis.”
“We think that
these cells normally play an important role in the remodeling
of the heart after birth, when the newborn heart no longer relies
upon the mother’s circulation and oxygenation,”
Chien said. “We believe the isl1+ progenitor cells are
left over from fetal development so that they can insure the
closure of any existing small heart defects and the formation
of a completely mature heart in newborns.”
The UCSD team noted
in the Nature paper that the next research steps with the isl1+
cells will be cellular transplantation in living animals to
study their role in endogenous repair after cardiac injury.
In addition to Chien,
Evans, Lauagwitz, Moretti and Lam, study authors included Peter
Gruber, M.D., Ph.D., Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia;
Yinhong Chen, M.D., Ph.D., Sarah Woodard, B.S., Lizhu Lin, Ph.D.,
and Chen-Leng Cai, Ph.D., UCSD Institute of Molecular Medicine;
Min Min Lu, Ph.D., Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania;
and Michael Reth, Ph.D., Max-Planck Institut fur Immunbiologie,
Universitat Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
The research was supported
by the National Institutes of Health, the Fondation Leducq,
and the German Research Foundation.
Media Contact:
Sue Pondrom
(619) 543-6163
|