Carnegie Mellon University
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Generation of functional ventricular heart muscle from mouse ventricular progenitor cells.

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journal contribution
posted on 2009-10-16, 00:00 authored by Ibrahim Domian, Murali Chiravuri, Peter van der Meer, Adam FeinbergAdam Feinberg, Xi Shi, Ying Shao, Sean M. Wu, Kevin Kit Parker, Kenneth R. Chien

The mammalian heart is formed from distinct sets of first and second heart field (FHF and SHF, respectively) progenitors. Although multipotent progenitors have previously been shown to give rise to cardiomyocytes, smooth muscle, and endothelial cells, the mechanism governing the generation of large numbers of differentiated progeny remains poorly understood. We have employed a two-colored fluorescent reporter system to isolate FHF and SHF progenitors from developing mouse embryos and embryonic stem cells. Genome-wide profiling of coding and noncoding transcripts revealed distinct molecular signatures of these progenitor populations. We further identify a committed ventricular progenitor cell in the Islet 1 lineage that is capable of limited in vitro expansion, differentiation, and assembly into functional ventricular muscle tissue, representing a combination of tissue engineering and stem cell biology.

History

Publisher Statement

This is the author’s version of the work. It is posted here by permission of the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Science

Date

2009-10-16