Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/5533
Title
miR-133a Enhances the Protective Capacity of Cardiac Progenitors Cells after Myocardial Infarction
Author(s)
Izarra, Alberto CNIC | Moscoso, Isabel CNIC | Levent, Elif | Canon, Susana CNIC | Cerrada, Inmaculada | Diez-Juan, Antonio CNIC | Blanca, Vanessa CNIC | Nunez-Gil, Ivan-J. | Valiente, Iñigo CNIC | Ruiz-Sauri, Amparo | Sepulveda, Pilar | Tiburcy, Malte | Zimmermann, Wolfram-H. | Bernad, Antonio CNIC
Date issued
2014
Citation
Stem Cell Reports. 2014; 3(6):1029-42
Language
Inglés
Abstract
miR-133a and miR-1 are known as muscle-specific microRNAs that are involved in cardiac development and pathophysiology. We have shown that both miR-1 and miR-133a are early and progressively upregulated during in vitro cardiac differentiation of adult cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs), but only miR-133a expression was enhanced under in vitro oxidative stress. miR-1 was demonstrated to favor differentiation of CPCs, whereas miR-133a overexpression protected CPCs against cell death, targeting, among others, the proapoptotic genes Bim and Bmf. miR-133a-CPCs clearly improved cardiac function in a rat myocardial infarction model by reducing fibrosis and hypertrophy and increasing vascularization and cardiomyocyte proliferation. The beneficial effects of miR-133a-CPCs seem to correlate with the upregulated expression of several relevant paracrine factors and the plausible cooperative secretion of miR-133a via exosomal transport. Finally, an in vitro heart muscle model confirmed the antiapoptotic effects of miR-133a-CPCs, favoring the structuration and contractile functionality of the artificial tissue.
Subject
ENGINEERED HEART-TISSUE | EMBRYONIC STEM-CELLS | OXIDATIVE STRESS | MUSCLE | DIFFERENTIATION | MICRORNA | HYPERTROPHY | APOPTOSIS | GROWTH | REGENERATION
Online version
DOI
Collections