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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Tissue cardiomyoplasty using bioengineered contractile cardiomyocyte sheets to repair damaged myocardium: their integration with recipient myocardium.

BACKGROUND: We hypothesized that tissue-engineered contractile cardiomyocyte sheets without a scaffold would show histological and electrical integration with impaired myocardium, leading to the regeneration of infarcted myocardium. METHODS: Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were cultured on Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)-grafted polystyrene dishes and detached as a square cell sheet at 20 degrees C. Two sheets were stacked to make thicker contractile cardiac sheets. In cross-section, the stacked sheets looked like homogeneous heart-like tissue. Two weeks after rats were subjected to left anterior descending (LAD) ligation, two treatments were conducted: 1) cardiomyocyte sheet implantation (T group, n=10), and 2) fibroblast sheet implantation (F group, n=10). The control group underwent no additional treatment (C group, n=10). RESULTS: Echocardiography demonstrated that cardiac performance was significantly ameliorated in the T group 2, 4, and 8 weeks after implantation. The cardiomyocyte sheets became attached to the infarcted myocardium, showed angiogenesis, expressed connexin-43, and appeared as homogeneous tissue in the myocardium Electrophysiological experiments showed a QRS complex with one peak in the treated scar area in the T group, but two peaks, indicative of branch block, in that of the other groups. Furthermore, the threshold for pacing of the recipient heart was lower in the T group than in the other groups. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiomyocyte sheets integrated with the impaired myocardium and improved cardiac performance in a model of ischemic myocardium. Techniques using such tissue-engineered cell sheets are introducing the promising concept of tissue cardiomyoplasty to the field of regenerative medicine.[1]

References

  1. Tissue cardiomyoplasty using bioengineered contractile cardiomyocyte sheets to repair damaged myocardium: their integration with recipient myocardium. Miyagawa, S., Sawa, Y., Sakakida, S., Taketani, S., Kondoh, H., Memon, I.A., Imanishi, Y., Shimizu, T., Okano, T., Matsuda, H. Transplantation (2005) [Pubmed]
 
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