Publication:
Bmi1-Progenitor Cell Ablation Impairs the Angiogenic Response to Myocardial Infarction.

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2018

Authors

Herrero, Diego
Cañón, Susana
Pelacho, Beatriz
Salvador-Bernáldez, María
Aguilar, Susana
Pogontke, Cristina
Carmona, Rosa María
Salvador, Jesús María
Perez-Pomares, Jose María
Klein, Ophir David

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Abstract

Objective- Cardiac progenitor cells reside in the heart in adulthood, although their physiological relevance remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that after myocardial infarction, adult Bmi1+ (B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog [PCGF4]) cardiac cells are a key progenitor-like population in cardiac neovascularization during ventricular remodeling. Approach and Results- These cells, which have a strong in vivo differentiation bias, are a mixture of endothelial- and mesenchymal-related cells with in vitro spontaneous endothelial cell differentiation capacity. Genetic lineage tracing analysis showed that heart-resident Bmi1+ progenitor cells proliferate after acute myocardial infarction and differentiate to generate de novo cardiac vasculature. In a mouse model of induced myocardial infarction, genetic ablation of these cells substantially deteriorated both heart angiogenesis and the ejection fraction, resulting in an ischemic-dilated cardiac phenotype. Conclusions- These findings imply that endothelial-related Bmi1+ progenitor cells are necessary for injury-induced neovascularization in adult mouse heart and highlight these cells as a suitable therapeutic target for preventing dysfunctional left ventricular remodeling after injury.

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Animals
Cells, Cultured
Disease Models, Animal
Female
Humans
Male
Mice
Mice, Transgenic
Myocardial Infarction
Myocytes, Cardiac
Neovascularization, Pathologic
Polycomb Repressive Complex 1
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-kit
Stem Cells
Transcription Factors
Ventricular Remodeling

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Keywords

cell differentiation, lymphoma, myocardial infarction, phenotype, ventricular remodeling

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