Lost and found: cardiac stem cell therapy revisited
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《中华首席医学网》
Abstract
Several clinical trials of bone marrow stem cell therapy for myocardial infarction are ongoing, but the mechanistic basis for any potential therapeutic effect is currently unclear. A growing body of evidence suggests that the potential improvement in cardiac function is largely independent of cardiac muscle regeneration. A study by Fazel et al. in this issue of the JCI provides evidence that bone marrow–derived c-kit+ cells can lead to an improvement in cardiac function in mutant hypomorphic c-kit mice that is independent of transdifferentiation into either cardiac muscle or endothelial cells, but rather is associated with the release of angiogenic cytokines and associated neovascularization in the infarct border zone (see the related article beginning on page 1865). These findings suggest the potential therapeutic effect of specific paracrine pathways for angiogenesis in improving cardiac function in the injured heart.
The physician without physiology flounders along in an aimless fashion, never able to gain an accurate conception of disease, practicing a sort of popgun pharmacy, hitting now the malady and again the patient, he himself not knowing which.— William Osler
Over the past few years, several hundred patients have been treated with various forms of bone marrow stem cell therapy during acute myocardial infarction, ranging from direct intracoronary injection of unfractionated bone marrow–derived cells to treatment with agents that mobilize circulating hematopoietic stem cells (refs. 1–5; for review, see refs. 6, 7). Based on dramatic, early studies in experimental animals (8, 9), these cell-based therapy clinical trials were quickly initiated, with the hope that augmenting the number of injected or circulating hematopoietic stem cells would lead to the regeneration of the myocardium that had been lost during the acute ischemic event. The large, unmet clinical need and the promise of stem cell therapy formed the basis for this rapid clinical translation. Despite great interest in cell-based therapy for heart failure, the suitability of this approach remains as intriguing as ever. Although initial anecdotal, uncontrolled clinical reports suggested that there might be a therapeutic benefit, there now appears to be a growing consensus that the mechanism for any potential benefit is unknown and there is little evidence to support the onset of cardiac muscle regeneration following any type of clinical bone marrow cell therapy (for review, see ref. 7). Experimental studies now suggest that the transferred cells are largely eliminated from the heart within the first 24–48 hours after intracoronary infusion (10). Compounding the difficulty, the results of 4 separate double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trials have been ambiguous, either showing a modest effect (the REPAIR-AMI [Reinfusion of Enriched Progenitor Cells and Infarct Remodeling in Acute Myocardial Infarction] trial reported a 3% improvement in ejection fraction versus controls; for review see ref. 6), short-lived benefit (results of the BOOST II [Bone Marrow Transfer to Enhance ST-Elevation Infarct Regeneration] trial showed no significant difference between control and treated individuals at 18 months; ref. 2), or no improvement in global cardiac function (STEMI [ST-Elevation Acute Myocardial Infarction; ref. 3]; and ASTAMI [Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation in Acute Myocardial Infarction; ref. 4] trials; for review see ref. 6). Although previous studies have reported that the administration of hematopoietic growth factors can mobilize hematopoietic stem cells and thereby augment cardiac function by regenerating myocardium following myocardial infarction (8), the results of the large scale clinical Regenerate Vital Myocardium by Vigorous Activation of Bone Marrow Stem Cells (REVIVAL-2) trial designed to test this concept have also been negative (5). Independent attempts from many labs to reproduce the results of the initial animal studies (9) that claimed a robust effect of bone marrow stem cell therapy in acute myocardial infarction with respect to cardiac muscle regeneration have also been negative (11–13). Although there has been continued evidence to suggest an improvement in cardiac contractile function in the short term following multiple forms of cell therapy in the post–myocardial infarct setting, the basis for this effect remains unclear (14). Given the lack of an unequivocal proof of concept in either the clinical or experimental arena, the field of cardiovascular stem cell therapy could be viewed as lost in translation (15). Unfortunately, without a proven physiological underpinning for any potential therapeutic signal, it has become difficult to optimally redesign the clinical studies. Conceptually, a number of known variables could account for the potential therapeutic effects of cell therapy on cardiac function following myocardial infarction, both cardiomyocyte cell autonomous (cell survival/death pathways, hypertrophy, calcium cycling, cytoskeletal, etc.) and non–cell autonomous (neoangiogenesis, scar formation, chamber dilation, hemodynamic workload, etc.). As noted by Osler over a century ago, the transition from "popgun pharmacy" to targeted therapy first requires a firm understanding of the pathophysiological basis of the desired therapeutic endpoint.
Paracrine angiogenic pathways for cardiac repair by bone marrow precursors
In the current issue of the JCI, Fazel and coworkers report on their use of genetically engineered mouse models toward this goal (16) (for brief diagrammatic overview, see Figure 1). Utilizing hypomorphic c-kit mutant mice (compound heterozygote KitW/KitW-v mice) that harbor an intrinsic defect in hematopoietic stem cell mobilization, the authors noted an accelerated progression to dilated cardiomyopathy following acute myocardial infarction versus control mice, which is associated with a decrease in neoangiogenesis in the injured myocardium. By reconstituting the bone marrow of irradiated wild-type mice with GFP-tagged cells, the authors determined that there are only rare c-kit + cells in the heart at baseline and the vast majority of the cells that are resident in the heart following acute myocardial infarction are bone marrow derived, suggesting that it might be possible to rescue the cardiac defect in the mutant mice via bone marrow reconstitution with wild-type bone marrow cells. The authors go on to document this rescue of the heart phenotype with wild-type bone marrow cell transplantation, which is associated with an induction of angiogenic cytokines and enhanced neoangiogenesis. Taken together, these results suggest that bone marrow–derived progenitors can have a marked influence on cardiac repair by promoting neoangiogenesis via paracrine signaling pathways as opposed to directly transdifferentiating into either cardiac muscle or vascular cells. The studies identify clearly, for the first time, a defined paracrine role for cell-based therapy in the injured heart following myocardial infarction.
Experimental and clinical implications
On the experimental front, the study (16) raises several critical issues. First and foremost is whether these studies in a mutant mouse model system have any direct bearing on ongoing human clinical trials. It will become critical to rigorously quantitate changes in specific paracrine factors following cell therapy in small and large animal models of myocardial infarction. Ascribing any therapeutic benefit to an effect on neovascularization may require conditionally knocking down (or out) specific cytokines in the transplanted cell population, where one would lose the presumed therapeutic effect on cardiac function as well as on neoangiogenesis. Second, if it is indeed a paracrine effect, an examination of the relative efficacy of the intramyocardial delivery of angiogenic cytokines in experimental model systems of acute myocardial infarction appears warranted. If indeed the effects of cell therapy in the acutely ischemic heart are not related to transdifferentiation, it could become valuable to define which autologous cell type has the optimal profile of angiogenic paracrine factors to drive the desired neovascularization end point. It will also become of interest to determine if there is a distinct functional difference and role for the previously resident c-kit + cells in the heart (17) versus the influx of c-kit + cells from the bone marrow. In this regard, further characterization, purification, and functional analyses of specific cell subsets could be informative.
On the clinical front, these studies raise the larger question as to whether the mechanistic basis for cardiovascular cell therapy following acute myocardial infarction might be more closely related to the biology of wound healing than regenerative medicine. The short-term effects of infiltrating or transplanted cell types from bone marrow might be partially based on the triggering of an inflammatory response, with the secondary release of cytokines and nonspecific angiogenic cues. In a similar manner, homing of these cells into the injured myocardium might represent the migration of inflammatory cells across a breakdown in the vascular permeability barrier that accompanies many forms of tissue injury. Interestingly, one of the clear messages from the placebo-controlled trials is that there can be a statistically significant, partial recovery of cardiac function in control groups (5). In the only long-term study to date, the control group eventually reached the same extent of functional recovery seen in the treated groups (2), which might relate to the acceleration of cardiac scar formation by inflammatory pathways. Inflammation is known to be linked to atherogenesis, and recent studies suggest luminal loss in the infarct-related artery following intracoronary delivery of bone marrow precursors (18). Accordingly, careful clinical monitoring for these long-term effects seems warranted.
A parable for regenerative medicine
In this ongoing parable of regenerative medicine, the initial hope was that we were in an advantageous position to take a "shot on goal" by moving quickly to clinical studies. The rationale was noble, clear, and compelling, particularly given the unmet clinical need and the robust results of early scientific studies. However, it now is becoming increasingly clear that we may not have the optimal cell type in hand, let alone a clear understanding of other key variables such as in vivo delivery, efficiency of grafting, and suppression of alternative, unwanted cell phenotypes (e.g., pacemaker cell formation in the midst of cardiac muscle regeneration). Cardiovascular stem cell biology still remains one of the most intriguing fields of scientific inquiry in the cardiovascular field and holds great long-term potential. Perhaps, given our growing understanding of the complexity of cell therapy for heart disease, the time has come to "move the ball down the field" by first trying to understand the mechanistic basis of this potential therapy.
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: The author has declared that no conflict of interest exists.
Citation for this article: J. Clin. Invest. 116:1838–1840 (2006). doi:10.1172/JCI29050.
See the related article beginning on page 1865.
References
Assmus B., et al. 2002. Transplantation of Progenitor Cells and Regeneration Enhancement in Acute Myocardial Infarction (TOPCARE-AMI). Circulation. 106:3009–3017.
Meyer G.P., et al. 2006. Intracoronary bone marrow cell transfer after myocardial infarction: eighteen months’ follow-up data from the randomized, controlled BOOST (BOne marrOw transfer to enhance ST-elevation infarct regeneration) trial. Circulation. 113:1287–1294.
Janssens S., et al. 2006. Autologous bone marrow-derived stem-cell transfer in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 367:113–121.
Lunde K., et al. 2005. Autologous stem cell transplantation in acute myocardial infarction: the ASTAMI randomized controlled trial. Intracoronary transplantation of autologous mononuclear bone marrow cells, study design and safety aspects. Scand. Cardiovasc. J. 39:150–158.
Zohlnhofer D., et al. 2006. Stem cell mobilization by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in patients with acute myocardial infarction: a randomized controlled trial. Jama. 295:1003–1010.
Cleland J.G., Freemantle N., Coletta A.P., Clark A.L. 2006. Clinical trials update from the American Heart Association: REPAIR-AMI, ASTAMI, JELIS, MEGA, REVIVE-II, SURVIVE, and PROACTIVE. Eur. J. Heart Fail. 8:105–110.
Wollert K.C. and Drexler H. 2006. Cell-based therapy for heart failure. Curr. Opin. Cardiol. 21:234–239.
Orlic D., et al. 2001. Mobilized bone marrow cells repair the infarcted heart, improving function and survival. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98:10344–10349.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Orlic D., et al. 2001. Bone marrow cells regenerate infarcted myocardium. Nature. 410:701–705.
Hofmann M., et al. 2005. Monitoring of bone marrow cell homing into the infarcted human myocardium. Circulation. 111:2198–2202.
Murry C.E., et al. 2004. Haematopoietic stem cells do not transdifferentiate into cardiac myocytes in myocardial infarcts. Nature. 428:664–668.
Balsam L.B., et al. 2004. Haematopoietic stem cells adopt mature haematopoietic fates in ischaemic myocardium. Nature. 428:668–673.
Nygren J.M., et al. 2004. Bone marrow-derived hematopoietic cells generate cardiomyocytes at a low frequency through cell fusion, but not transdifferentiation. Nat. Med. 10:494–501.
Dimmeler S., Zeiher A.M., Schneider M.D. 2005. Unchain my heart: the scientific foundations of cardiac repair. J. Clin. Invest. 115:572–583 doi: 10.1172/JCI200524283.
Chien K.R. 2004. Stem cells: lost in translation. Nature. 428:607–608.
Fazel S., et al. 2006. Cardioprotective c-kit+ cells are from the bone marrow and regulate the myocardial balance of angiogenic cytokines. J. Clin. Invest. 116:1865–1877 doi: 10.1172/JCI27019.
Beltrami A.P., et al. 2003. Adult cardiac stem cells are multipotent and support myocardial regeneration. Cell. 114:763–776.
Mansour S., et al. 2006. Intracoronary delivery of hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells and luminal loss of the infarct-related artery in patients with recent myocardial infarction. J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 47:1727–1730.
Related Article
Cardioprotective c-kit+ cells are from the bone marrow and regulate the myocardial balance of angiogenic cytokines
Shafie Fazel, Massimo Cimini, Liwen Chen, Shuhong Li, Denis Angoulvant, Paul Fedak, Subodh Verma, Richard D. Weisel, Armand Keating, and Ren-Ke Li
J. Clin. Invest. 2006 116: 1865-1877.
Massachusetts General Hospital Cardiovascular Research Center, Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.(Kenneth R. Chien)
Several clinical trials of bone marrow stem cell therapy for myocardial infarction are ongoing, but the mechanistic basis for any potential therapeutic effect is currently unclear. A growing body of evidence suggests that the potential improvement in cardiac function is largely independent of cardiac muscle regeneration. A study by Fazel et al. in this issue of the JCI provides evidence that bone marrow–derived c-kit+ cells can lead to an improvement in cardiac function in mutant hypomorphic c-kit mice that is independent of transdifferentiation into either cardiac muscle or endothelial cells, but rather is associated with the release of angiogenic cytokines and associated neovascularization in the infarct border zone (see the related article beginning on page 1865). These findings suggest the potential therapeutic effect of specific paracrine pathways for angiogenesis in improving cardiac function in the injured heart.
The physician without physiology flounders along in an aimless fashion, never able to gain an accurate conception of disease, practicing a sort of popgun pharmacy, hitting now the malady and again the patient, he himself not knowing which.— William Osler
Over the past few years, several hundred patients have been treated with various forms of bone marrow stem cell therapy during acute myocardial infarction, ranging from direct intracoronary injection of unfractionated bone marrow–derived cells to treatment with agents that mobilize circulating hematopoietic stem cells (refs. 1–5; for review, see refs. 6, 7). Based on dramatic, early studies in experimental animals (8, 9), these cell-based therapy clinical trials were quickly initiated, with the hope that augmenting the number of injected or circulating hematopoietic stem cells would lead to the regeneration of the myocardium that had been lost during the acute ischemic event. The large, unmet clinical need and the promise of stem cell therapy formed the basis for this rapid clinical translation. Despite great interest in cell-based therapy for heart failure, the suitability of this approach remains as intriguing as ever. Although initial anecdotal, uncontrolled clinical reports suggested that there might be a therapeutic benefit, there now appears to be a growing consensus that the mechanism for any potential benefit is unknown and there is little evidence to support the onset of cardiac muscle regeneration following any type of clinical bone marrow cell therapy (for review, see ref. 7). Experimental studies now suggest that the transferred cells are largely eliminated from the heart within the first 24–48 hours after intracoronary infusion (10). Compounding the difficulty, the results of 4 separate double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trials have been ambiguous, either showing a modest effect (the REPAIR-AMI [Reinfusion of Enriched Progenitor Cells and Infarct Remodeling in Acute Myocardial Infarction] trial reported a 3% improvement in ejection fraction versus controls; for review see ref. 6), short-lived benefit (results of the BOOST II [Bone Marrow Transfer to Enhance ST-Elevation Infarct Regeneration] trial showed no significant difference between control and treated individuals at 18 months; ref. 2), or no improvement in global cardiac function (STEMI [ST-Elevation Acute Myocardial Infarction; ref. 3]; and ASTAMI [Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation in Acute Myocardial Infarction; ref. 4] trials; for review see ref. 6). Although previous studies have reported that the administration of hematopoietic growth factors can mobilize hematopoietic stem cells and thereby augment cardiac function by regenerating myocardium following myocardial infarction (8), the results of the large scale clinical Regenerate Vital Myocardium by Vigorous Activation of Bone Marrow Stem Cells (REVIVAL-2) trial designed to test this concept have also been negative (5). Independent attempts from many labs to reproduce the results of the initial animal studies (9) that claimed a robust effect of bone marrow stem cell therapy in acute myocardial infarction with respect to cardiac muscle regeneration have also been negative (11–13). Although there has been continued evidence to suggest an improvement in cardiac contractile function in the short term following multiple forms of cell therapy in the post–myocardial infarct setting, the basis for this effect remains unclear (14). Given the lack of an unequivocal proof of concept in either the clinical or experimental arena, the field of cardiovascular stem cell therapy could be viewed as lost in translation (15). Unfortunately, without a proven physiological underpinning for any potential therapeutic signal, it has become difficult to optimally redesign the clinical studies. Conceptually, a number of known variables could account for the potential therapeutic effects of cell therapy on cardiac function following myocardial infarction, both cardiomyocyte cell autonomous (cell survival/death pathways, hypertrophy, calcium cycling, cytoskeletal, etc.) and non–cell autonomous (neoangiogenesis, scar formation, chamber dilation, hemodynamic workload, etc.). As noted by Osler over a century ago, the transition from "popgun pharmacy" to targeted therapy first requires a firm understanding of the pathophysiological basis of the desired therapeutic endpoint.
Paracrine angiogenic pathways for cardiac repair by bone marrow precursors
In the current issue of the JCI, Fazel and coworkers report on their use of genetically engineered mouse models toward this goal (16) (for brief diagrammatic overview, see Figure 1). Utilizing hypomorphic c-kit mutant mice (compound heterozygote KitW/KitW-v mice) that harbor an intrinsic defect in hematopoietic stem cell mobilization, the authors noted an accelerated progression to dilated cardiomyopathy following acute myocardial infarction versus control mice, which is associated with a decrease in neoangiogenesis in the injured myocardium. By reconstituting the bone marrow of irradiated wild-type mice with GFP-tagged cells, the authors determined that there are only rare c-kit + cells in the heart at baseline and the vast majority of the cells that are resident in the heart following acute myocardial infarction are bone marrow derived, suggesting that it might be possible to rescue the cardiac defect in the mutant mice via bone marrow reconstitution with wild-type bone marrow cells. The authors go on to document this rescue of the heart phenotype with wild-type bone marrow cell transplantation, which is associated with an induction of angiogenic cytokines and enhanced neoangiogenesis. Taken together, these results suggest that bone marrow–derived progenitors can have a marked influence on cardiac repair by promoting neoangiogenesis via paracrine signaling pathways as opposed to directly transdifferentiating into either cardiac muscle or vascular cells. The studies identify clearly, for the first time, a defined paracrine role for cell-based therapy in the injured heart following myocardial infarction.
Experimental and clinical implications
On the experimental front, the study (16) raises several critical issues. First and foremost is whether these studies in a mutant mouse model system have any direct bearing on ongoing human clinical trials. It will become critical to rigorously quantitate changes in specific paracrine factors following cell therapy in small and large animal models of myocardial infarction. Ascribing any therapeutic benefit to an effect on neovascularization may require conditionally knocking down (or out) specific cytokines in the transplanted cell population, where one would lose the presumed therapeutic effect on cardiac function as well as on neoangiogenesis. Second, if it is indeed a paracrine effect, an examination of the relative efficacy of the intramyocardial delivery of angiogenic cytokines in experimental model systems of acute myocardial infarction appears warranted. If indeed the effects of cell therapy in the acutely ischemic heart are not related to transdifferentiation, it could become valuable to define which autologous cell type has the optimal profile of angiogenic paracrine factors to drive the desired neovascularization end point. It will also become of interest to determine if there is a distinct functional difference and role for the previously resident c-kit + cells in the heart (17) versus the influx of c-kit + cells from the bone marrow. In this regard, further characterization, purification, and functional analyses of specific cell subsets could be informative.
On the clinical front, these studies raise the larger question as to whether the mechanistic basis for cardiovascular cell therapy following acute myocardial infarction might be more closely related to the biology of wound healing than regenerative medicine. The short-term effects of infiltrating or transplanted cell types from bone marrow might be partially based on the triggering of an inflammatory response, with the secondary release of cytokines and nonspecific angiogenic cues. In a similar manner, homing of these cells into the injured myocardium might represent the migration of inflammatory cells across a breakdown in the vascular permeability barrier that accompanies many forms of tissue injury. Interestingly, one of the clear messages from the placebo-controlled trials is that there can be a statistically significant, partial recovery of cardiac function in control groups (5). In the only long-term study to date, the control group eventually reached the same extent of functional recovery seen in the treated groups (2), which might relate to the acceleration of cardiac scar formation by inflammatory pathways. Inflammation is known to be linked to atherogenesis, and recent studies suggest luminal loss in the infarct-related artery following intracoronary delivery of bone marrow precursors (18). Accordingly, careful clinical monitoring for these long-term effects seems warranted.
A parable for regenerative medicine
In this ongoing parable of regenerative medicine, the initial hope was that we were in an advantageous position to take a "shot on goal" by moving quickly to clinical studies. The rationale was noble, clear, and compelling, particularly given the unmet clinical need and the robust results of early scientific studies. However, it now is becoming increasingly clear that we may not have the optimal cell type in hand, let alone a clear understanding of other key variables such as in vivo delivery, efficiency of grafting, and suppression of alternative, unwanted cell phenotypes (e.g., pacemaker cell formation in the midst of cardiac muscle regeneration). Cardiovascular stem cell biology still remains one of the most intriguing fields of scientific inquiry in the cardiovascular field and holds great long-term potential. Perhaps, given our growing understanding of the complexity of cell therapy for heart disease, the time has come to "move the ball down the field" by first trying to understand the mechanistic basis of this potential therapy.
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: The author has declared that no conflict of interest exists.
Citation for this article: J. Clin. Invest. 116:1838–1840 (2006). doi:10.1172/JCI29050.
See the related article beginning on page 1865.
References
Assmus B., et al. 2002. Transplantation of Progenitor Cells and Regeneration Enhancement in Acute Myocardial Infarction (TOPCARE-AMI). Circulation. 106:3009–3017.
Meyer G.P., et al. 2006. Intracoronary bone marrow cell transfer after myocardial infarction: eighteen months’ follow-up data from the randomized, controlled BOOST (BOne marrOw transfer to enhance ST-elevation infarct regeneration) trial. Circulation. 113:1287–1294.
Janssens S., et al. 2006. Autologous bone marrow-derived stem-cell transfer in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 367:113–121.
Lunde K., et al. 2005. Autologous stem cell transplantation in acute myocardial infarction: the ASTAMI randomized controlled trial. Intracoronary transplantation of autologous mononuclear bone marrow cells, study design and safety aspects. Scand. Cardiovasc. J. 39:150–158.
Zohlnhofer D., et al. 2006. Stem cell mobilization by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in patients with acute myocardial infarction: a randomized controlled trial. Jama. 295:1003–1010.
Cleland J.G., Freemantle N., Coletta A.P., Clark A.L. 2006. Clinical trials update from the American Heart Association: REPAIR-AMI, ASTAMI, JELIS, MEGA, REVIVE-II, SURVIVE, and PROACTIVE. Eur. J. Heart Fail. 8:105–110.
Wollert K.C. and Drexler H. 2006. Cell-based therapy for heart failure. Curr. Opin. Cardiol. 21:234–239.
Orlic D., et al. 2001. Mobilized bone marrow cells repair the infarcted heart, improving function and survival. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98:10344–10349.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Orlic D., et al. 2001. Bone marrow cells regenerate infarcted myocardium. Nature. 410:701–705.
Hofmann M., et al. 2005. Monitoring of bone marrow cell homing into the infarcted human myocardium. Circulation. 111:2198–2202.
Murry C.E., et al. 2004. Haematopoietic stem cells do not transdifferentiate into cardiac myocytes in myocardial infarcts. Nature. 428:664–668.
Balsam L.B., et al. 2004. Haematopoietic stem cells adopt mature haematopoietic fates in ischaemic myocardium. Nature. 428:668–673.
Nygren J.M., et al. 2004. Bone marrow-derived hematopoietic cells generate cardiomyocytes at a low frequency through cell fusion, but not transdifferentiation. Nat. Med. 10:494–501.
Dimmeler S., Zeiher A.M., Schneider M.D. 2005. Unchain my heart: the scientific foundations of cardiac repair. J. Clin. Invest. 115:572–583 doi: 10.1172/JCI200524283.
Chien K.R. 2004. Stem cells: lost in translation. Nature. 428:607–608.
Fazel S., et al. 2006. Cardioprotective c-kit+ cells are from the bone marrow and regulate the myocardial balance of angiogenic cytokines. J. Clin. Invest. 116:1865–1877 doi: 10.1172/JCI27019.
Beltrami A.P., et al. 2003. Adult cardiac stem cells are multipotent and support myocardial regeneration. Cell. 114:763–776.
Mansour S., et al. 2006. Intracoronary delivery of hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells and luminal loss of the infarct-related artery in patients with recent myocardial infarction. J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 47:1727–1730.
Related Article
Cardioprotective c-kit+ cells are from the bone marrow and regulate the myocardial balance of angiogenic cytokines
Shafie Fazel, Massimo Cimini, Liwen Chen, Shuhong Li, Denis Angoulvant, Paul Fedak, Subodh Verma, Richard D. Weisel, Armand Keating, and Ren-Ke Li
J. Clin. Invest. 2006 116: 1865-1877.
Massachusetts General Hospital Cardiovascular Research Center, Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.(Kenneth R. Chien)