4.6 Article

Brachyury engineers cardiac repair competent stem cells

Journal

STEM CELLS TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 385-397

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1002/sctm.20-0193

Keywords

cardiopoiesis; cardiopoietic stem cells; heart failure; myocardial infarction; regenerative therapy; RNA engineering

Funding

  1. Mayo Clinic Center for Regenerative Medicine
  2. Michael S. and Mary Sue Shannon Family
  3. Mayo Bonner MD-PhD Scholarship
  4. Marriott Family Foundation
  5. Van Cleve Cardiac Regenerative Medicine Program
  6. Regenerative Medicine Minnesota [021218BT001]
  7. NIH [T32 HL07111, R01 HL134664]
  8. A. Gary and Anita Klesch Predoctoral Fellowship

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By introducing early cardiogenic genes, engineered cardiac repair competent stem cells with antioxidant, vasculogenic, and immunomodulatory traits have been successfully developed. These stem cells have important application value in treating heart diseases such as ischemic heart failure.
To optimize the regenerative proficiency of stem cells, a cardiopoietic protein-based cocktail consisting of multiple growth factors has been developed and advanced into clinical trials for treatment of ischemic heart failure. Streamlining the inductors of cardiopoiesis would address the resource intensive nature of the current stem cell enhancement protocol. To this end, the microencapsulated-modified-mRNA (M(3)RNA) technique was here applied to introduce early cardiogenic genes into human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (AMSCs). A single mesodermal transcription factor, Brachyury, was sufficient to trigger high expression of cardiopoietic markers, Nkx2.5 and Mef2c. Engineered cardiopoietic stem cells (eCP) featured a transcriptome profile distinct from pre-engineered AMSCs. In vitro, eCP demonstrated protective antioxidant capacity with enhanced superoxide dismutase expression and activity; a vasculogenic secretome driving angiogenic tube formation; and macrophage polarizing immunomodulatory properties. In vivo, in a murine model of myocardial infarction, intramyocardial delivery of eCP (600 000 cells per heart) improved cardiac performance and protected against decompensated heart failure. Thus, heart repair competent stem cells, armed with antioxidant, vasculogenic, and immunomodulatory traits, are here engineered through a protein-independent single gene manipulation, expanding the available regenerative toolkit.

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