Therapeutic efficacy of cardiosphere-derived cells in a transgenic mouse model of non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy

MA Aminzadeh, E Tseliou, B Sun, K Cheng… - European heart …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
MA Aminzadeh, E Tseliou, B Sun, K Cheng, K Malliaras, RR Makkar, E Marban
European heart journal, 2015academic.oup.com
Abstract Aim Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) produce regenerative effects in the post-
infarct setting. However, it is unclear whether CDCs are beneficial in non-ischaemic dilated
cardiomyopathy (DCM). We tested the effects of CDC transplantation in mice with cardiac-
specific Gαq overexpression, which predictably develop progressive cardiac dilation and
failure, with accelerated mortality. Methods and results Wild-type mouse CDCs (105 cells) or
vehicle only were injected intramyocardially in 6-, 8-, and 11-week-old Gαq mice. Cardiac …
Aim
Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) produce regenerative effects in the post-infarct setting. However, it is unclear whether CDCs are beneficial in non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). We tested the effects of CDC transplantation in mice with cardiac-specific Gαq overexpression, which predictably develop progressive cardiac dilation and failure, with accelerated mortality.
Methods and results
Wild-type mouse CDCs (105 cells) or vehicle only were injected intramyocardially in 6-, 8-, and 11-week-old Gαq mice. Cardiac function deteriorated in vehicle-treated mice over 3 months of follow-up, accompanied by oxidative stress, inflammation and adverse ventricular remodelling. In contrast, CDCs preserved cardiac function and volumes, improved survival, and promoted cardiomyogenesis while blunting Gαq-induced oxidative stress and inflammation in the heart. The mechanism of benefit is indirect, as long-term engraftment of transplanted cells is vanishingly low.
Conclusions
Cardiosphere-derived cells reverse fundamental abnormalities in cell signalling, prevent adverse remodelling, and improve survival in a mouse model of DCM. The ability to impact favourably on disease progression in non-ischaemic heart failure heralds new potential therapeutic applications of CDCs.
Oxford University Press