University of Washington

Dr. Charles E. Murry

Induction of Cardiac Differentiation from IPS Cells

Funding granted: $37,500


Summary of Research: Induction of Cardiac Differentiation from IPS Cells

Provided by Dr. Charles E. Murry, University of Washington

The formation of a fully functional heart requires a complex series of developmental events

that begin very early during embryonic life. The early heart forms a tube that loops in a

sequential pattern that leads to the formation of four chambers. During the maturation

process a vascular network develops, creating a system for pumping blood throughout the

body. Disturbances in this finely tuned developmental pattern leads to congenital heart

defects, which affect thousands of newborns every year. Although cardiac muscle cells

divide robustly during the early stages of development, as the heart matures, they loose the

capacity to proliferate. Thus, to date, people that have sub-optimal amounts of cardiac

muscle cells due to congenital defects or injury have a permanently impaired cardiovascular

function. Because of the great promise that cell-based therapies have to improve the quality

of life for patients with heart disease, our laboratory is focusing on this exciting new

approach to address this problem.

One of the goals of our laboratory is to supply damaged hearts with cardiovascular cells that

will improve function. Many adult cells have been examined as potential sources to obtain

cardiac muscle cells, but none have been shown to generate these cells at therapeutically

relevant levels. This is not surprising in light of the fact that although in the earliest stages

of development, embryonic cells are pluripotent (they have the capacity to become any cell

type in the body), as the embryo matures, cells become restricted and functionally

specialized. Some organs like the liver retain a remarkable regenerative capacity; however,

the human heart is not naturally capable of repairing cardiac muscle deficiencies. To date,

embryonic pluripotent stem cells (ES) have been shown to be the most reliable sources of

cardiac muscle cells. The utilization of ES-derived cardiac muscle cells for human therapy

will require a large amount of input cells. Towards this goal, we have established a method

that generates cardiomyocytes from human ES cells at a higher efficiency than previously

established methods. We recently used this method to generate cells that were transplanted

into infarcted rat hearts. Our studies showed an improvement in cardiac function.

In addition to the advances in ES cell technology, recent breakthroughs have led to the

generation of human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells (non-embryonic cells that have

been reprogrammed to a developmentally immature state). We believe that iPS cells are

promising because the reprogramming method allows them to regain the ability to become

multiple different cell types, including cardiac muscle cells. These cells also present the

opportunity to generate patient-specific cells that could bypass the challenges of immune

rejection. Our research will focus on experiments that aim to optimize the yield of cardiac

muscle cells derived from human iPS cells.

The Mend a Heart Foundation's mission is to fund promising research that supports our mission of extending and enriching the lives of children born with congenital heart defects.

The Mend a Heart Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charitable organization. The organization has no paid employees; it is run strictly by volunteers.

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