| Literature DB >> 27536554 |
Abstract
In the last decade, cell replacement therapy has emerged as a potential approach to treat patients suffering from myocardial infarction (MI). The transplantation or local stimulation of progenitor cells with the ability to form new cardiac tissue provides a novel strategy to overcome the massive loss of myocardium after MI. In this regard the epicardium, the outer layer of the heart, is a tractable local progenitor cell population for therapeutic pursuit. The epicardium has a crucial role in formation of the embryonic heart. After activation and migration into the developing myocardium, epicardial cells differentiate into several cardiac cells types. Additionally, the epicardium provides instructive signals for the growth of the myocardium and coronary angiogenesis. In the adult heart, the epicardium is quiescent, but recent evidence suggests that it becomes reactivated upon damage and recapitulates at least part of its embryonic functions. In this review we provide an update on the current knowledge regarding the contribution of epicardial cells to the adult mammalian heart during the injury response.Entities:
Keywords: development; epicardium; myocardial infarction; progenitor cells; regeneration
Year: 2014 PMID: 27536554 PMCID: PMC4984950 DOI: 10.3390/jdb2020084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Biol ISSN: 2221-3759
Figure 1Comparison between the epicardium in embryonic development and the response to myocardial infarction. This schematic overview shows similarities and differences between the role of the epicardium in embryonic heart development and the post-MI response, which are discussed in this review. Dashed lines and red boxes indicate processes and aspects that are not fully established and are under debate.
Abbreviations: PEO: proepicardial organ; MI: myocardial infarction; EMT: epicardial-mesenchymal transition; SMC: smooth muscle cell; EC: endothelial cell; CM: cardiomyocyte; Tβ4: Thymosin-beta 4.
Epicardial lineage tracing following myocardial infarction. Abbreviations: Ad: adenovirus, Msln: mesothelin, SMC: smooth muscle cell, Fibro: fibroblast, EC: endothelial cell, CM: cardiomyocyte, SM-MHC: smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, αSMA: α smooth muscle actin, FN1: fibronectin 1. ColIII: collagen type III, FSP1: fibroblast-specific protein 1, proCol1: procollagen1, cTnI: cardiac TroponinI, sαActin: sarcomeric α Actin, DDR2: discoidin domain receptor2, cTnT: cardiac TroponinT, Cx43: connexin 43; N-Cad: N-Cadherin; Tβ4: Thymosinβ4.
| Model | Activation | EPDC Differentiation | Markers Used for Identification | Time-points | Details | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expansion | SMC | SM-MHC, αSMA, SM22α | 14d | Tamoxifen: twice weekly for 2-3 weeks, MI one week after final injection | |||
| n.a. | Fibro | FSP1 | 3d-4wks | Ultrasound-guided virus delivery | |||
| Expansion | CM | cTnT, sαActin, Cx43, N-Cad, | 14d | Tβ4: Pre- and post-MI | |||
| Expansion | SMC | αSMA | 7d | Tβ4: Pre- and post-MI | |||
| Expansion | SMC | αSMA | 14d | Tamoxifen: twice weekly for 2-3 weeks, MI one week after final injection | |||
| Expansion | SMC | αSMA | 1mo, 3mo (CM) | ||||
| Migration | CM | sαActin, morphology | 7d, 21d | Sub-pericardial virus injection |
other cell types not reported;
comparable results at 1week ,1month and 3 month post-MI;
cells lacked adult CM morphology;
displayed no mature markers, remained rounded.