Expression of p16(Ink4a) and p19(Arf) increases with age in both rodent and human tissues. However, whether these tumour suppressors are effectors of ageing remains unclear, mainly because knockout mice lacking p16(Ink4a) or p19(Arf) die early of tumours. Here, we show that skeletal muscle and fat, two tissues that develop early ageing-associated phenotypes in response to BubR1 insufficiency, have high levels of p16(Ink4a) and p19(Arf). Inactivation of p16(Ink4a) in BubR1-insufficient mice attenuates both cellular senescence and premature ageing in these tissues. Conversely, p19(Arf) inactivation exacerbates senescence and ageing in BubR1 mutant mice. Thus, we identify BubR1 insufficiency as a trigger for activation of the Cdkn2a locus in certain mouse tissues, and demonstrate that p16(Ink4a) is an effector and p19(Arf) an attenuator of senescence and ageing in these tissues.
Background-Nuclear reprogramming provides an emerging strategy to produce embryo-independent pluripotent stem cells from somatic tissue. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) demonstrate aptitude for de novo cardiac differentiation, yet their potential for heart disease therapy has not been tested. Methods and Results-In this study, fibroblasts transduced with human stemness factors OCT3/4, SOX2, KLF4, and c-MYC converted into an embryonic stem cell-like phenotype and demonstrated the ability to spontaneously assimilate into preimplantation host morula via diploid aggregation, unique to bona fide pluripotent cells. In utero, iPS-derived chimera executed differentiation programs to construct normal heart parenchyma patterning. Within infarcted hearts in the adult, intramyocardial delivery of iPS yielded progeny that properly engrafted without disrupting cytoarchitecture in immunocompetent recipients. In contrast to parental nonreparative fibroblasts, iPS treatment restored postischemic contractile performance, ventricular wall thickness, and electric stability while achieving in situ regeneration of cardiac, smooth muscle, and endothelial tissue.
Embryonic stem cells have the distinct potential for tissue regeneration, including cardiac repair. Their propensity for multilineage differentiation carries, however, the liability of neoplastic growth, impeding therapeutic application. Here, the tumorigenic threat associated with embryonic stem cell transplantation was suppressed by cardiac-restricted transgenic expression of the reprogramming cytokine TNF-α, enhancing the cardiogenic competence of recipient heart. The in vivo aptitude of TNF-α to promote cardiac differentiation was recapitulated in embryoid bodies in vitro. The procardiogenic action required an intact endoderm and was mediated by secreted cardio-inductive signals. Resolved TNF-α–induced endoderm-derived factors, combined in a cocktail, secured guided differentiation of embryonic stem cells in monolayers produce cardiac progenitors termed cardiopoietic cells. Characterized by a down-regulation of oncogenic markers, up-regulation, and nuclear translocation of cardiac transcription factors, this predetermined population yielded functional cardiomyocyte progeny. Recruited cardiopoietic cells delivered in infarcted hearts generated cardiomyocytes that proliferated into scar tissue, integrating with host myocardium for tumor-free repair. Thus, cardiopoietic programming establishes a strategy to hone stem cell pluripotency, offering a tumor-resistant approach for regeneration.
ATP-sensitive potassium (K(ATP)) channels are evolutionarily conserved plasma-membrane protein complexes, widely represented in tissue beds with high metabolic activity. There, they are formed through physical association of the inwardly rectifying potassium channel pore, most typically Kir6.2, and the regulatory sulfonylurea receptor subunit, an ATP-binding cassette protein. Energetic signals, received via tight integration with cellular metabolic pathways, are processed by the sulfonylurea receptor subunit that in turn gates the nucleotide sensitivity of the channel pore thereby controlling membrane potential dependent cellular functions. Recent findings, elicited from genetic disruption of channel proteins, have established in vivo the requirement of intact K(ATP) channels in the proper function of cardiac muscle under stress. In the heart, where K(ATP) channels were originally discovered, channel ablation compromises cardioprotection under ischemic insult. New data implicate the requirement of intact K(ATP) channels for the cardiac adaptive response to acute stress. K(ATP) channels have been further implicated in the adaptive cardiac response to chronic (patho)physiologic hemodynamic load, with K(ATP) channel deficiency affecting structural remodeling, rendering the heart vulnerable to calcium-dependent maladaptation and predisposing to heart failure. These findings are underscored by the identification in humans that defective K(ATP) channels induced by mutations in ABCC9, the gene encoding the cardiac sulfonylurea receptor subunit, confer susceptibility to dilated cardiomyopathy. Thus, in parallel with the developed understanding of the molecular identity and mode of action of K(ATP) channels since their discovery, there is now an expanded understanding of their critical significance in the cardiac stress response in health and disease.
Objective The goal of this study was to guide bone marrow-derived human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) into a cardiac progenitor phenotype, and assess therapeutic benefit in chronic myocardial infarction. Background Adult stem cells, delivered in their naïve state, demonstrate a limited benefit in patients with ischemic heart disease. Preemptive lineage pre-specification may optimize therapeutic outcome. Methods hMSC were harvested from a coronary artery disease patient cohort. A recombinant cocktail consisting of TGFβ1, BMP-4, Activin-A, retinoic acid, IGF-1, FGF-2, α-thrombin and IL-6 was formulated to engage hMSC into cardiopoiesis. Derived hMSC were injected into the myocardium of a nude infarcted murine model, and followed over 1-year for functional and structural end-points. Results While the majority of patient-derived hMSC in their native state demonstrated limited effect on ejection fraction, stem cells from rare individuals harbored a spontaneous capacity to improve contractile performance. This reparative cytotype was characterized by high expression of Nkx2.5, Tbx5, Mesp-1 and Mef2C, markers of cardiopoiesis. Recombinant cardiogenic cocktail guidance secured the cardiopoietic phenotype across the patient cohort. Compared to unguided counterparts, cardiopoietic hMSC delivered into infarcted myocardium achieved superior functional and structural benefit without adverse side effects. Engraftment into murine hearts was associated with increased human-specific nuclear, sarcomeric and gap junction content along with induction of myocardial cell cycle activity. Conclusions Guided cardiopoiesis thus enhances the therapeutic benefit of bone marrow-derived human mesenchymal stem cells in chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy.
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