4.7 Review

Regenerative Neurology and Regenerative Cardiology: Shared Hurdles and Achievements

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23020855

Keywords

stem cells; regenerative neuroscience; brain regeneration; neurology; cardiology; myocardial regeneration; clinical trials

Funding

  1. Croatian Science Foundation project Orastem [IP-16-6-9451]
  2. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund [KK.01.1.1.01.0007]
  3. Croatian Science Foundation
  4. AGING Project for Department of Excellence at the Department of Translational Medicine (DIMET), Universita del Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy
  5. Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of Republic of Serbia [451-03-68/2020-14/200178, 451-03-9/2021-14/200129]
  6. Medical Research Council [MR/R025002/1]
  7. NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre
  8. Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [2020-1.1.6-JOVO -202100013, K128369]
  9. Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [812660, 739593]
  10. Chinese-Hungarian Bilateral Project, Chinese [2018-2.1.14-TET-CN-2018-00011, 8-4]
  11. Spanish State Research Agency [SAF2017-83702-R]
  12. TERCEL (Instituto de Salud Carlos III) [RD16/001/0010, PID2020-11817RB-100]
  13. National Science Centre, Poland [2019/35/B/NZ3/04383]
  14. MRC [MR/R025002/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The success of in vitro cell cultivation has opened up new opportunities for medical research, particularly in the development of tissue-specific cultures and the transplantation of standardized cells for tissue regeneration. However, regenerative neurology and cardiology face different obstacles due to the unique needs of different cell types. In this review, European experts in neurology and cardiology discuss the hurdles and potential strategies for accelerating the development of these fields.
From the first success in cultivation of cells in vitro, it became clear that developing cell and/or tissue specific cultures would open a myriad of new opportunities for medical research. Expertise in various in vitro models has been developing over decades, so nowadays we benefit from highly specific in vitro systems imitating every organ of the human body. Moreover, obtaining sufficient number of standardized cells allows for cell transplantation approach with the goal of improving the regeneration of injured/disease affected tissue. However, different cell types bring different needs and place various types of hurdles on the path of regenerative neurology and regenerative cardiology. In this review, written by European experts gathered in Cost European action dedicated to neurology and cardiology-Bioneca, we present the experience acquired by working on two rather different organs: the brain and the heart. When taken into account that diseases of these two organs, mostly ischemic in their nature (stroke and heart infarction), bring by far the largest burden of the medical systems around Europe, it is not surprising that in vitro models of nervous and heart muscle tissue were in the focus of biomedical research in the last decades. In this review we describe and discuss hurdles which still impair further progress of regenerative neurology and cardiology and we detect those ones which are common to both fields and some, which are field-specific. With the goal to elucidate strategies which might be shared between regenerative neurology and cardiology we discuss methodological solutions which can help each of the fields to accelerate their development.

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