Cardiac mesoangioblasts are committed, self-renewable progenitors, associated with small vessels of juvenile mouse ventricle
- 23 May 2008
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell Death & Differentiation
- Vol. 15 (9) , 1417-1428
- https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2008.75
Abstract
Different cardiac stem/progenitor cells have been recently identified in the post-natal heart. We describe here the identification, clonal expansion and characterization of self-renewing progenitors that differ from those previously described for high spontaneous cardiac differentiation. Unique coexpression of endothelial and pericyte markers identify these cells as cardiac mesoangioblasts and allow prospective isolation and clonal expansion from the juvenile mouse ventricle. Cardiac mesoangioblasts express many cardiac transcription factors and spontaneously differentiate into beating cardiomyocytes that assemble mature sarcomeres and express typical cardiac ion channels. Cells similarly isolated from the atrium do not spontaneously differentiate. When injected into the ventricle after coronary artery ligation, cardiac mesoangioblasts efficiently generate new myocardium in the peripheral area of the necrotic zone, as they do when grafted in the embryonic chick heart. These data identify cardiac mesoangioblasts as committed progenitors, downstream of earlier stem/progenitor cells and suitable for the cell therapy of a subset of juvenile cardiac diseases.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Postnatal isl1+ cardioblasts enter fully differentiated cardiomyocyte lineagesNature, 2005
- Isolation and Expansion of Adult Cardiac Stem Cells From Human and Murine HeartCirculation Research, 2004
- A decade of discoveries in cardiac biologyNature Medicine, 2004
- Cardiac progenitor cells from adult myocardium: Homing, differentiation, and fusion after infarctionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- Adult Cardiac Stem Cells Are Multipotent and Support Myocardial RegenerationCell, 2003
- Human embryonic stem cells can differentiate into myocytes with structural and functional properties of cardiomyocytesJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2001
- Neovascularization of ischemic myocardium by human bone-marrow–derived angioblasts prevents cardiomyocyte apoptosis, reduces remodeling and improves cardiac functionNature Medicine, 2001
- Developmental Changes in the Delayed Rectifier K + Channels in Mouse HeartCirculation Research, 1996
- Transesophageal EchocardiographyJournal of the American Society of Echocardiography, 1989
- Recommendations regarding quantitation in M-mode echocardiography: results of a survey of echocardiographic measurements.Circulation, 1978