Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
Volume 49, Issue 2 , Pages 312-321, August 2010

Isolation and expansion of functionally-competent cardiac progenitor cells directly from heart biopsies

  • Darryl R. Davis

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
  • ,
  • Eddy Kizana

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
    • Department of Cardiology, Westmead Hospital, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • ,
  • John Terrovitis

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
  • ,
  • Andreas S. Barth

      Affiliations

    • Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA
  • ,
  • Yiqiang Zhang

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
  • ,
  • Rachel Ruckdeschel Smith

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
  • ,
  • Junichiro Miake

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
  • ,
  • Eduardo Marbán

      Affiliations

    • Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 310 423 7557; fax: +1 310 423 7637.

Received 12 January 2010; received in revised form 22 February 2010; accepted 23 February 2010. published online 08 March 2010.

Abstract 

The adult heart contains reservoirs of progenitor cells that express embryonic and stem cell-related antigens. While these antigenically-purified cells are promising candidates for autologous cell therapy, clinical application is hampered by their limited abundance and tedious isolation methods. Methods that involve an intermediate cardiosphere-forming step have proven successful and are being tested clinically, but it is unclear whether the cardiosphere step is necessary. Accordingly, we investigated the molecular profile and functional benefit of cells that spontaneously emigrate from cardiac tissue in primary culture. Adult Wistar–Kyoto rat hearts were minced, digested and cultured as separate anatomical regions. Loosely-adherent cells that surround the plated tissue were harvested weekly for a total of five harvests. Genetic lineage tracing demonstrated that a small proportion of the direct outgrowth from cardiac samples originates from myocardial cells. This outgrowth contains sub-populations of cells expressing embryonic (SSEA-1) and stem cell-related antigens (c-Kit, abcg2) that varied with time in culture but not with the cardiac chamber of origin. This direct outgrowth, and its expanded progeny, underwent marked in vitro angiogenic/cardiogenic differentiation and cytokine secretion (IGF-1, VGEF). In vivo effects included long-term functional benefits as gauged by MRI following cell injection in a rat model of myocardial infarction. Outgrowth cells afforded equivalent functional benefits to cardiosphere-derived cells, which require more processing steps to manufacture. These results provide the basis for a simplified and efficient process to generate autologous cardiac progenitor cells (and mesenchymal supporting cells) to augment clinically-relevant approaches for myocardial repair.

Keywords: Cell therapy, Myocardial infarction, Cardiac regeneration, Angiogenesis, Ventricular remodelling

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PII: S0022-2828(10)00080-5

doi:10.1016/j.yjmcc.2010.02.019

Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
Volume 49, Issue 2 , Pages 312-321, August 2010