4.8 Article

Heart repair by reprogramming non-myocytes with cardiac transcription factors

Journal

NATURE
Volume 485, Issue 7400, Pages 599-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11139

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. Donald W. Reynolds Center for Clinical Cardiovascular Research
  3. Robert A. Welch Foundation [I-0025]
  4. Leducq Fondation-Transatlantic Network of Excellence in Cardiovascular Research
  5. American Heart Association-Jon Holden DeHaan Foundation
  6. Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT)

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The adult mammalian heart possesses little regenerative potential following injury. Fibrosis due to activation of cardiac fibroblasts impedes cardiac regeneration and contributes to loss of contractile function, pathological remodelling and susceptibility to arrhythmias. Cardiac fibroblasts account for a majority of cells in the heart and represent a potential cellular source for restoration of cardiac function following injury through phenotypic reprogramming to a myocardial cell fate. Here we show that four transcription factors, GATA4, HAND2, MEF2C and TBX5, can cooperatively reprogram adult mouse tail-tip and cardiac fibroblasts into beating cardiac-like myocytes in vitro. Forced expression of these factors in dividing non-cardiomyocytes in mice reprograms these cells into functional cardiac-like myocytes, improves cardiac function and reduces adverse ventricular remodelling following myocardial infarction. Our results suggest a strategy for cardiac repair through reprogramming fibroblasts resident in the heart with cardiogenic transcription factors or other molecules.

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