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Heart muscle
cells
may regenerate
VALHALLA — Challenging one of medicine’s longstanding
beliefs, a team of scientists funded by the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and the National
Institute on Aging (NIA) has found the strongest evidence to date
that human heart muscle cells regenerate after a heart attack. In
a paper published in the June 7 issue of the New England Journal
of Medicine, scientists from New York Medical College in Valhalla
report their success in finding large scale replication of heart
muscle cells in two regions of the heart, and in identifying several
other key indicators of cell regeneration.
“It has long been assumed that when the heart is
damaged—such as after a heart attack—heart muscle cells do not regenerate
and the damage is permanent. This assumption has been challenged
in recent years by evidence that heart muscle cells may in fact
regenerate. Now, this latest research provides the most dramatic
and clearcut demonstration to date of
heart cell regeneration after cardiac injury,” says Claude Lenfant,
M.D., director of the NHLBI, a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
“With this landmark study, we have a new understanding
of the heart that opens up the possibility of repairing heart muscle
damage after a heart attack,” he adds. “This finding, if confirmed,
may begin to clarify how hearts respond to the normal insults of
aging through previously undetected repair mechanisms,” says David
Finkelstein, Ph.D., director of basic cardiovascular research at
the NIH.
Piero Anversa,
M.D., professor of medicine and director of the Cardiovascular Research
Institute, and colleagues, studied myocytes
(heart muscle cells) from the hearts of 13 patients, four to 12
days after their heart attacks, and from the hearts of 10 patients
who did not have cardiovascular disease. Samples were obtained from
the border zone near the site of the heart attack and from a more
distant site from the damaged tissue.
By viewing these areas of the heart with a high
resolution confocal microscope, Anversa and
colleagues were able to measure the expression of Ki67, a protein
found in the nucleus of dividing heart muscle cells. Ki67 is expressed
during all phases of a cell’s life cycle and is a strong indicator
of cell division. The scientists also obtained images of mitotic
division and found other evidence of myoctye replication, including the formation of the “mitotic
spindle” and “contractile ring,” critical structural indicators
of cell division.
Important evidence of myocardial repair was demonstrated
by the mitotic index, a measurement of the degree of myocyte
division. In comparison with normal hearts, the number of myoctyes
multiplying in diseased hearts was 70 times higher in the border
zone and 24 times higher in the remote myocardium.
The next challenge, according to Anversa,
is to find the source of the dividing myoctyes.
“Are these cells a subpopulation of known cells that retain the
capacity to divide, or are they multiplying cells that originate
from stem cells present in the heart?” he asks.
“There are preliminary indications that primitive
cells like stem cells exist in the human heart. Stem cells may have
the ability to develop into the various cardiac cell types and form
new healthy functioning myocardium. If we can prove the existence
of cardiac stem cells and make these cells migrate to the region
of tissue damage, we could conceivably improve the repair of damaged
heart muscle and reduce heart failure,” says Anversa.
Research on animal models supports this possibility.
In the April 4 issue of Nature, the Anversa
team and a colleague at the NIH reported
that adult stem cells isolated from mouse bone and injected into
a damaged mouse heart became functioning heart muscle by developing
into myocytes and coronary vessels. Moreover,
the newly formed tissue partially restored the heart’s ability to
pump blood.
Although a cardiac stem cell has not yet been identified,
scientists have identified a neural stem cell in the brain.
“Why not the heart?” asks Anversa.
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