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1.
J Cardiovasc Aging ; 2(3)2022 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35891703

Introduction: The adult heart lacks the regenerative capacity to self-repair. Serum response factor (SRF) is essential for heart organogenesis, sarcomerogenesis, and contractility. SRF interacts with co-factors, such as NKX2.5 and GATA4, required for cardiac specified gene activity. ETS factors such as ELK1 interact with SRF and drive cell replication. To weaken SRF interactions with NKX2.5 and GATA4, one mutant, SRF153(A3) named STEMIN, did not bind CArG boxes, yet induced stem cell factors such as NANOG and OCT4, cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation, and cell cycle reentry. The mutant YAP5SA of the Hippo pathway also promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation and growth. Aim: Infarcted adult mouse hearts were injected with translatable STEMIN and YAP5SA mmRNA to evaluate their clinical potential. Methods and Results: Mice were pulsed one day later with alpha-EDU and then heart sections were DAPI stained. Replicating cells were identified by immuno-staining against members of the DNA replisome pathway that mark entry to S phase of the cell cycle. Echocardiography was used to determine cardiac function following infarcts and mRNA treatment. To monitor cardiac wall repair, microscopic analysis was performed, and the extent of myocardial fibrosis was analyzed for immune cell infiltration. Injections of STEMIN and YAP5SA mmRNA into the left ventricles of infarcted adult mice promoted a greater than 17-fold increase in the DAPI stained and alpha-EDU marked cardiomyocyte nuclei, within a day. We observed de novo expression of phospho-histone H3, ORC2, MCM2, and CLASPIN. Cardiac function was significantly improved by four weeks post-infarct, and fibrosis and immune cell infiltration were diminished in hearts treated with STEMIN and YAP5SA mmRNA than each alone. Conclusion: STEMIN and YAP5SA mmRNA improved cardiac function and myocardial fibrosis in left ventricles of infarcted adult mice. The combinatorial use of mmRNA encoding STEMIN and YAP5SA has the potential to become a powerful clinical strategy to treat human heart disease.

2.
Cardiovasc Eng Technol ; 11(2): 205-218, 2020 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31916039

PURPOSE: The objective of this study was to bioengineer 3D patches from cardiac myocytes that have been reprogrammed from human adipogenic mesenchymal stem cells (hADMSCs). METHODS: Human adipogenic mesenchymal stem cells (hADMSCs) were reprogrammed to form cardiac myocytes using transcription factors ETS2 and MESP1. Reprogrammed cardiac myocytes were cultured in a fibrin gel to bioengineer 3D patch patches. The effect of initial plating density (1-25 million cells per patch), time (28-day culture period) and treatment with 1 µM isoproterenol and 1 µM epinephrine were evaluated. RESULTS: 3D patches were fabricated using cardiac myocytes that have been reprogrammed from hADMSCs. Based on optimization studies, it was determined that 10 million cells were needed to bioengineer a single patch, that measured 2 × 2 cm2. Furthermore, 3D patches fabricated 10 million cells were stable in culture for up to 28 days. Treatment of 3D patches with 1 µM isoproterenol and 1 µM epinephrine resulted in an increase in the electrical properties, as measured by electrical impulse amplitude and frequency. An increase in the expression of mTOR, KCNV1, GJA5, KCNJ16, CTNNT2, KCNV2, MYO3, FOXO1 and KCND2 was noted in response to treatment of 3D patches with isoproterenol and epinephrine. CONCLUSION: Based on the results of this study, there is evidence to support the successful fabrication of a highly functional 3D patches with measurable electrical activity using cardiac myocytes reprogrammed from hADMSCs. 3D patches fabricated using optimal conductions described in this study can be used to improve the functional properties of failing hearts. Predominantly, in case of the infarcted hearts with partial loss of electrical activity, the electrical properties of the 3D patches may restore the electrical activity of the heart.


Adipogenesis , Cellular Reprogramming Techniques , Cellular Reprogramming , Heart Failure/surgery , Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation , Mesenchymal Stem Cells , Myocytes, Cardiac/transplantation , Tissue Engineering , Adrenergic Agonists/pharmacology , Cells, Cultured , Electric Conductivity , Epinephrine/pharmacology , Fibrin/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation , Heart Failure/genetics , Heart Failure/metabolism , Heart Failure/physiopathology , Humans , Isoproterenol/pharmacology , Membrane Potentials , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/drug effects , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Time Factors
3.
J Tissue Eng Regen Med ; 14(2): 306-318, 2020 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31821703

Clinical trials using human adipogenic mesenchymal stem cells (hAdMSCs) for the treatment of cardiac diseases have shown improvement in cardiac function and were proven safe. However, hAdMSCs do not convert efficiently into cardiomyocytes (CMs) or vasculature. Thus, reprogramming hAdMSCs into myocyte progenitors may fare better in future investigations. To reprogramme hAdMSCs into electrically conductive cardiac progenitor cells, we pioneered a three-step reprogramming strategy that uses proven MESP1/ETS2 transcription factors, ß-adrenergic and hypoxic signalling induced in three-dimensional (3D) cardiospheres. In Stage 1, ETS2 and MESP1 activated NNKX2.5, TBX5, MEF2C, dHAND, and GATA4 during the conversion of hAdMSCs into cardiac progenitor cells. Next, in Stage 2, ß2AR activation repositioned cardiac progenitors into de novo immature conductive cardiac cells, along with the appearance of RYR2, CAV2.1, CAV3.1, NAV1.5, SERCA2, and CX45 gene transcripts and displayed action potentials. In Stage 3, electrical conduction that was fostered by 3D cardiospheres formed in a Synthecon®, Inc. rotating bioreactor induced the appearance of hypoxic genes: HIF-1α/ß, PCG 1α/ß, and NOS2, which coincided with the robust activation of adult contractile genes including MLC2v, TNNT2, and TNNI3, ion channel genes, and the appearance of hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide-gated channels (HCN1-4). Conduction velocities doubled to ~200 mm/s after hypoxia and doubled yet again after dissociation of the 3D cell clusters to ~400 mm/s. By comparison, normal conduction velocities within working ventricular myocytes in the whole heart range from 0.5 to 1 m/s. Epinephrine stimulation of stage 3 cardiac cells in patches resulted in an increase in amplitude of the electrical wave, indicative of conductive cardiac cells. Our efficient protocol that converted hAdMSCs into highly conductive cardiac progenitors demonstrated the potential utilization of stage 3 cells for tissue engineering applications for cardiac repair.


Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/cytology , Receptors, Adrenergic, beta/metabolism , Adipogenesis , Adrenergic Agents , Bioreactors , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cell Proliferation , Electric Conductivity , Epinephrine/pharmacology , Humans , Hypoxia , Kinetics , Myocytes, Cardiac/cytology , Signal Transduction , Tissue Engineering/instrumentation , Tissue Engineering/methods , Tissue Scaffolds , Transcription Factors/metabolism
4.
Biotechnol Annu Rev ; 14: 275-96, 2008.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18606368

The practice of cell culture has been virtually unchanged for 100 years. Until recently, life scientists have had to content themselves with two-dimensional cell culture technology. Clearly, living creatures are not constructed in two dimensions and thus it has become widely recognized that in vitro culture systems must become three dimensional to correctly model in vivo biology. Attempts to modify conventional 2-D culture technology to accommodate 3-D cell growth such as embedding cells in extracellular matrix have demonstrated the superiority of concept. Nevertheless, there are serious drawbacks to this approach including limited mass transport and lack of scalability. Recently, a new cell culture technology developed at NASA to study the effects of microgravity on cells has emerged to solve many of the problems of 3-D cell culture. The technology, the Rotating Wall Vessel (RWV) is a single axis clinostat consisting of a fluid-filled, cylindrical, horizontally rotating culture vessel. Cells placed in this environment are suspended by the resolution of the gravitational, centrifugal and Coriolis forces with extremely low mechanical shear. These conditions, which have been called "low shear modeled microgravity", enable cells to assemble into tissue-like aggregates with high mass transport of nutrients, oxygen and wastes. Examples of the use of the RWV for basic cell biology research and tissue engineering applications are discussed.


Cell Culture Techniques/instrumentation , Cell Physiological Phenomena , Tissue Engineering/instrumentation , Weightlessness Simulation/instrumentation , Animals , Biology/instrumentation , Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Equipment Design , Humans , Shear Strength , Weightlessness , Weightlessness Simulation/methods
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