Scientists
at Duke University Medical Center have shown the ability to turn scar tissue
that forms after a heart attack into heart muscle cells using a new process
that eliminates the need for stem cell transplant.
The study, published online April 26 in the journal
Circulation Research, used molecules called microRNAs to trigger the cardiac
tissue conversion in a lab dish and, for the first time, in a living mouse,
demonstrating the potential of a simpler process for tissue regeneration.
If additional studies confirm the approach in human cells,
it could lead to a new way for treating many of the 23 million people worldwide
who suffer heart failure, which is often caused by scar tissue that develops
after a heart attack. The approach could also have benefit beyond heart
disease.
"This is a significant finding with many
therapeutic implications," said Victor J. Dzau, MD, a senior author on the
study who is James B. Duke professor of medicine and chancellor of health
affairs at Duke University. "If you can do this in the heart, you can do
it in the brain, the kidneys, and other tissues. This is a whole new way of
regenerating tissue."
To initiate the regeneration, Dzau's team at Duke
used microRNAs, which are molecules that serve as master regulators controlling
the activity of multiple genes. Tailored in a specific combination, the
microRNAs were delivered into scar tissue cells called fibroblasts, which
develop after a heart attack and impair the organ's ability to pump blood.
Once deployed, the microRNAs reprogrammed
fibroblasts to become cells resembling the cardiomyocytes that make up heart
muscle. The Duke team not only proved this concept in the laboratory, but also
demonstrated that the cell conversion could occur inside the body of a mouse --
a major requirement for regenerative medicine to become a potential therapy.
"This is one of the exciting things about our
study," said Maria Mirotsou, PhD, assistant professor of cardiology at
Duke and a senior author of the study. "We were able to achieve this
tissue conversion in the heart with these microRNAs, which may be more
practical for direct delivery into cells and allow for possible development of
therapies without using genetic methods or transplantation of stem cells."
The researchers said using microRNA for tissue
regeneration has several potential advantages over genetic methods or
transplantation of stem cells, which have been difficult to manage inside the
body.
Notably, the microRNA process eliminates technical
problems such as genetic alterations, while also avoiding the ethical dilemmas
posed by stem cells.
"It's an exciting stage for reprogramming
science," said Tilanthi M. Jayawardena, PhD, first author of the study.
"It's a very young field, and we're all learning what it means to switch a
cell's fate. We believe we've uncovered a way for it to be done, and that it
has a lot of potential."
The approach will now be tested in larger animals.
Dzau said therapies could be developed within a decade if additional studies
advance in larger animals and humans.
"We have proven the concept," Dzau said.
"This is the very early stage, and we have only shown that is it doable in
an animal model. Although that's a very big step, we're not there yet for
humans."
In addition to Dzau, Mirotsou and Jayawardena, study
authors include: Bakytbek Egemnazarov; Elizabeth A. Finch; Lunan Zhang; Kumar
Pandya; J. Alan Payne; Zhiping Zhang; and Paul Rosenberg.
Funding for the study was provided by the National
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; the Edna and Fred L. Mandel Jr. Foundation;
the Foundation Leducq; Mirotsou is supported by the American Heart Association
National Scientist Development Award; Rosenberg is supported by the NIH.
ScienceDaily
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