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Human ISL1+ Ventricular Progenitors Self-Assemble into an In Vivo Functional Heart Patch and Preserve Cardiac Function Post Infarction.

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 08:03 authored by Kylie S Foo, Miia L Lehtinen, Chuen Yan Leung, Xiaojun Lian, Jiejia Xu, Wendy Keung, Lin Geng, Terje RS Kolstad, Sebastian ThamsSebastian Thams, Andy On-Tik Wong, Nicodemus Wong, Kristine Bylund, Chikai Zhou, Xiaobing He, Shao-Bo JinShao-Bo Jin, Jonathan Clarke, Urban LendahlUrban Lendahl, Ronald A Li, William E Louch, Kenneth ChienKenneth Chien
The generation of human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-derived ventricular progenitors and their assembly into a 3-dimensional in vivo functional ventricular heart patch has remained an elusive goal. Herein, we report the generation of an enriched pool of hPSC-derived ventricular progenitors (HVPs), which can expand, differentiate, self-assemble, and mature into a functional ventricular patch in vivo without the aid of any gel or matrix. We documented a specific temporal window, in which the HVPs will engraft in vivo. On day 6 of differentiation, HVPs were enriched by depleting cells positive for pluripotency marker TRA-1-60 with magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS), and 3 million sorted cells were sub-capsularly transplanted onto kidneys of NSG mice where, after 2 months, they formed a 7 mm × 3 mm × 4 mm myocardial patch resembling the ventricular wall. The graft acquired several features of maturation: expression of ventricular marker (MLC2v), desmosomes, appearance of T-tubule-like structures, and electrophysiological action potential signature consistent with maturation, all this in a non-cardiac environment. We further demonstrated that HVPs transplanted into un-injured hearts of NSG mice remain viable for up to 8 months. Moreover, transplantation of 2 million HVPs largely preserved myocardial contractile function following myocardial infarction. Taken together, our study reaffirms the promising idea of using progenitor cells for regenerative therapy.

Funding

Regional network for Heart Failure Research : Southern and Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority | 2016109

History

File version

  • Published

Publication status

Published

Sub type

Article

Journal

Mol Ther

ISSN

1525-0016

eISSN

1525-0024

Volume

26

Issue

7

Pagination

1644-1659

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2021-07-01

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