Improved Cardiac Function After Heart Attack Using Dual Stem Cell Therapy
A dual approach using heart muscle derived from pluripotent stem cells and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), was shown to rejuvenate both the muscle cells and vascular systems of the heart and led to a significant improvement of cardiac function and vessel formation after a heart attack.
ABSTRACT
Park SJ1, Kim RY2, Park BW3,4, Lee S2, Choi SW1, Park JH4, Choi JJ1, Kim SW5, Jang J6, Cho DW5, Chung HM1, Moon SH7,8, Ban K9, Park HJ10,11,12.
Nat Commun. 2019 Jul 16;10(1):3123. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-11091-2.
PMID: 31311935 PMCID: PMC6635499 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11091-2
Summary
Since both myocardium and vasculature in the heart are excessively damaged following myocardial infarction (MI), therapeutic strategies for treating MI hearts should concurrently target both so as to achieve true cardiac repair. Here we demonstrate a concomitant method that exploits the advantages of cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-CMs) and human mesenchymal stem cell-loaded patch (hMSC-PA) to amplify cardiac repair in a rat MI model. Epicardially implanted hMSC-PA provide a complimentary microenvironment which enhances vascular regeneration through prolonged secretion of paracrine factors, but more importantly it significantly improves the retention and engraftment of intramyocardially injected hiPSC-CMs which ultimately restore the cardiac function. Notably, the majority of injected hiPSC-CMs display adult CMs like morphology suggesting that the secretomic milieu of hMSC-PA constitutes pleiotropic effects in vivo. We provide compelling evidence that this dual approach can be a promising means to enhance cardiac repair on MI hearts.