| Literature DB >> 31744081 |
Elvira Immacolata Parrotta1, Stefania Scalise1, Luana Scaramuzzino1, Giovanni Cuda1.
Abstract
A comprehensive understanding of the molecular basis and mechanisms underlying cardiac diseases is mandatory for the development of new and effective therapeutic strategies. The lack of appropriate in vitro cell models that faithfully mirror the human disease phenotypes has hampered the understanding of molecular insights responsible of heart injury and disease development. Over the past decade, important scientific advances have revolutionized the field of stem cell biology through the remarkable discovery of reprogramming somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These advances allowed to achieve the long-standing ambition of modelling human disease in a dish and, more interestingly, paved the way for unprecedented opportunities to translate bench discoveries into new therapies and to come closer to a real and effective stem cell-based medicine. The possibility to generate patient-specific iPSCs, together with the new advances in stem cell differentiation procedures and the availability of novel gene editing approaches and tissue engineering, has proven to be a powerful combination for the generation of phenotypically complex, pluripotent stem cell-based cellular disease models with potential use for early diagnosis, drug screening, and personalized therapy. This review will focus on recent progress and future outcome of iPSCs technology toward a customized medicine and new therapeutic options.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease (CVD); disease modelling; embryonic stem cells (ESCs); heart failure (HF); induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs); pluripotent stem cells (PSCs); regenerative medicine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31744081 PMCID: PMC6888119 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20225760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Pluripotent stem cells for cell transplantation therapy.
Figure 2Biomedical applications of human pluripotent stem cells.
Figure 3Cardiac regeneration.
Summary of cardiac differentiation methods.
| Method | Molecules for mesoderm and cardiac specification | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
|
| ⮚ FGF2, FGF2, BMP4, VEGFA, Dorsomorphin, SB431542, DKK1 | Kehat et al. 2001 [ |
| ⮚ BMP4, Activin A, bFGF, VEGF, DKK1 | Kattman et al. 2011 [ | |
| ⮚ FGF2, FGF2, BMP4, IWR1, Triiodothyronine | Yang et al. 2008 [ | |
| Willems et al. 2011 [ | ||
|
| ⮚ Activin A, bFGF, BMP4, SCF, VEGF, LI-BEL | Elliott et al. 2011 [ |
| ⮚ BMP4, Activin A, bFGF, VEGF, DKK1 | Burridge et al. 2007 [ | |
| ⮚ FGF2, FGF2, BMP4, IWR1, Triiodothyronine | Burridge et al. 2011 [ | |
|
| ⮚ Activin A, BMP4, IWR1 or IWR4 | Hudson et al. 2011 [ |
| ⮚ Activin A, BMP4, FGF2, VEGFA, DKK1 | Uosaki et al. 2011 [ | |
| ⮚ Activin A, BMP4 | Laflamme et al., 2007 [ | |
| ⮚ Activin A, BMP4, FGF2, RAi, Noggin, DKK1 | Zhang et al. 2011 [ | |
| ⮚ CHIR99021, Activin A, BMP4, XAV-939 | Palpant et al. 2016 [ | |
|
| ⮚ Insulin depletion, PGI2, p38 MAPK inhibition | Passier et al. 2005 [ |
| Graichen et al. 2008 [ | ||
| Freund et al. 2010 [ |