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Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts

Saturday, April 16, 2011

'Universal' Virus-Free Method Developed By Scientists To Turn Blood Cells Into 'Beating' Heart Cells

Saturday, April 16, 2011
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Johns Hopkins scientists have developed a simplified, cheaper, all-purpose method they say can be used by scientists around the globe to more safely turn blood cells into heart cells. The method is virus-free and produces heart cells that beat with nearly 100 percent efficiency, they claim.

"We took the recipe for this process from a complex minestrone to a simple miso soup," says Elias Zambidis, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of oncology and pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Cell Engineering and the Kimmel Cancer Center.


Zambidis says, "many scientists previously thought that a nonviral method of inducing blood cells to turn into highly functioning cardiac cells was not within reach, but "we've found a way to do it very efficiently and we want other scientists to test the method in their own labs." However, he cautions that the cells are not yet ready for human testing.


To get stem cells taken from one source (such as blood) and develop them into a cell of another type (such as heart), scientists generally use viruses to deliver a package of genes into cells to, first, get them to turn into stem cells. However, viruses can mutate genes and initiate cancers in newly transformed cells. To insert the genes without using a virus, Zambidis' team turned to plasmids, rings of DNA that replicate briefly inside cells and eventually degrade.


Adding to the complexity of coaxing stem cells into other cell types is the expensive and varied recipe of growth factors, nutrients and conditions that bathe stem cells during their transformation. The recipe of this "broth" differs from lab to lab and cell line to cell line.


Reporting in the April 8 issue of Public Library of Science ONE (PLoS ONE), Zambidis' team described what he called a "painstaking, two-year process" to simplify the recipe and environmental conditions that house cells undergoing transformation into heart cells. They found that their recipe worked consistently for at least 11 different stem cell lines tested and worked equally well for the more controversial embryonic stem cells, as well as stem cell lines generated from adult blood stem cells, their main focus.


The process began with Johns Hopkins postdoctoral scientist Paul Burridge, Ph.D., who studied some 30 papers on techniques to create cardiac cells. He drew charts of 48 different variables used to create heart cells, including buffers, enzymes, growth factors, timing, and the size of compartments in cell culture plates. After testing hundreds of combinations of these variables, Burridge narrowed the choices down to between four to nine essential ingredients at each of three stages of cardiac development.


Beyond simplification, an added benefit is reduced cost. Burridge used a cheaper growth media that is one-tenth the price of standard media for these cells at $250 per bottle lasting about one week.

Zambidis says that he wants other scientists to test the method on their stem cell lines, but also notes that the growth "soup" is still a work in progress. "We have recently optimized the conditions for complete removal of the fetal bovine serum from one brief step of the procedure - it's made from an animal product and could introduce unwanted viruses," he says.

In their experiments with the new growth medium, the Hopkins team began with cord blood stem cells and a plasmid to transfer seven genes into the stem cells. They delivered an electric pulse to the cells, making tiny holes in the surface through which plasmids can slip inside. Once inside, the plasmids trigger the cells to revert to a more primitive cell state that can be coaxed into various cell types. At this stage, the cells are called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC).


Burridge then bathed the newly formed iPSCs in the now simplified recipe of growth media, which they named "universal cardiac differentiation system." The growth media recipe is specific to creating cardiac cells from any iPSC line.


Finally, they incubated the cells in containers that removed oxygen down to a quarter of ordinary atmospheric levels. "The idea is to recreate conditions experienced by an embryo when these primitive cells are developing into different cell types," says Burridge. They also added a chemical called PVA, which works like glue to make cells stick together.


Nine days later, the nonviral iPSCs turned into functional, beating cardiac cells, each the size of a needlepoint.


Burridge manually counted how often iPSCs formed into cardiac cells in petri dishes by peering into a microscope and identifying each beating cluster of cells. In each of 11 cell lines tested, each plate of cells had an average of 94.5 percent beating heart cells. "Most scientists get 10 percent efficiency for IPSC lines if they're lucky," says Zambidis.


Zambidis and Burridge also worked with Johns Hopkins University bioengineering experts to apply a miniversion of an electrocardiograph to the cells, which tests how cardiac cells use calcium and transmit a voltage. The resulting rhythm showed characteristic pulses seen in a normal human heart.


Virus-free, iPSC-derived cardiac cells could be used in laboratories to test drugs that treat arrhythmia and other conditions. Eventually, bioengineers could develop grafts of the cells that are implanted into patients who suffered heart attacks.


Zambidis' team has recently developed similar techniques for turning these blood-derived iPSC lines into retinal, neural and vascular cells.


Notes:


The research was funded by the Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund and the National Institutes of Health.


Research participants include Susan Thompson, Michal Millrod, Seth Weinberg, Xuan Yuan, Ann Peters, Vasiliki Mahairaki, Vassilis E. Koliatsos, and Leslie Tung at Johns Hopkins.


Source:
Vanessa Wasta
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions


 


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Friday, April 15, 2011

Cardiac Stem Cell Treatment For Heart Failure Discussed By Roberto Bolli At Cannon Lecture

Friday, April 15, 2011
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Heart failure affects roughly six million Americans, yet treatment consists of either a heart transplant or the insertion of mechanical devices that assist the heart. This is unacceptable to Roberto Bolli, MD, Chief of the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Louisville in Louisville, Ky., which is why he is on a mission to make cardiac stem cell treatment an option for all who must cope with the limitations of a failing heart.

Dr. Bolli is conducting the groundbreaking study, "Cardiac Stem Cell Infusion in Patients with Ischemic cardiOmyopathy (SCIPIO)," in which researchers at the University of Louisville's Jewish Hospital are collaborating with a team led by Piero Anversa, MD, at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston to perfect a technique for using a patient's own cardiac stem cells to regenerate dead heart muscle after a heart attack.


In honor of his illuminating work, the American Physiological Society (APS) selected Dr. Bolli to present the Walter B. Cannon Memorial Lecture at the Experimental Biology 2011 meeting (EB 2011). This lecture is the Society's pre-eminent award lecture and is designed to recognize an outstanding scientist for his or her contributions to the field.


A Tale of Two Proteins


The cardiac stem cell treatment investigated in the SCIPIO trial consists of isolating the patient's cardiac stem cells from part of the upper chamber of the heart (harvested during coronary bypass surgery) and expanding these cells in the lab. Four months after surgery, the cells are infused into scarred cardiac tissue by catheterizing a large artery in the patient's leg. Using the patient's own cardiac stem cells eliminates the possibility of rejection.


Besides SCIPIO, Dr. Bolli is also performing basic research aimed at on enhancing the cardiac stem cells while they are cultured in the lab for expansion. He is working with two proteins, heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) and nitric oxide synthase (NOS). HO-1 is a protein made in response to cellular stress, such as oxidative stress or oxygen deficiency. It catalyzes the breakdown of heme, which is a molecular component of hemoglobin, the part of the red blood cell that transports oxygen around the body. When HO-1 breaks down heme, one of the by-products is carbon monoxide (CO). NOS, the other protein Dr. Bolli is investigating, is an enzyme that catalyzes the production of nitric oxide (NO). Dr. Bolli is focusing on these two proteins because their catalytic by-products, CO and NO, exert remarkable beneficial effects.


"When the heart muscle is dying because of a heart attack, these gases (CO and NO) are extremely cardioprotective and help the tissue survive," he says. "We are now applying these same proteins to stem cells, using the knowledge that we have gained from 20 years of research in cardioprotection."

A Promising Future

So far, the results are promising. "We have exciting data indicating that if we increase these proteins in stem cells, the stem cells become more resilient and more effective at repairing damage," Dr. Bolli says.


Even with natural cells (in which these proteins are not increased), such as those used in SCIPIO, the results are very encouraging. Improvements seen in patients who have received cardiac stem cell infusion include increased ejection fraction, the fraction of blood pumped through the two lower chambers of the heart. Patients also experience dramatic improvements in what they are able do physically, Dr. Bolli says. "There are people who are almost completely incapacitated, and after they get stem cells, they can do so much more. I have a patient who couldn't walk to the bathroom, and now he can walk two miles."


Dr. Bolli cautions that SCIPIO is a Phase 1 trial, meaning that it is the first round of testing in humans. Its primary purpose is to assess safety and feasibility, rather than efficacy. Yet, he remains optimistic and notes that cardiac stem cells offer the hope of healing the heart. "All of the other treatments currently available - transplants, assist devices, drugs - may prolong life but do not solve the problem. By regenerating new heart muscle, cardiac stem cells could actually solve the problem."


To date, 17 patients have received cardiac stem cells in the SCIPIO trial. Dr. Bolli discussed his research and provided the latest details of how the patients are faring when he presented this year's Cannon Lecture, "The nitric oxide-carbon monoxide module: A fundamental mechanism of cellular resistance to stress," on Saturday, April 9 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.


Walter B. Cannon Award Lecture


The Cannon Award lectureship, established in 1982, is the APS' highest award. The individual selected is an outstanding physiological scientist chosen by the President-Elect, with the consent of Council, to lecture on "Physiology in Perspective" during the plenary session of the Society's next annual meeting. At the 1984 fall meeting, the title of the presentation was changed to "Physiology in Perspective: The Walter B. Cannon Lecture."


Source:
Donna Krupa
American Physiological Society


 


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