Skip to main content

Human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes restore function in infarcted hearts of non-human primates.

Citation
Liu, Y. -W., et al. “Human Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Cardiomyocytes Restore Function In Infarcted Hearts Of Non-Human Primates.”. Nature Biotechnology, pp. 597-605.
Center University of Washington
Author Yen-Wen Liu, Billy Chen, Xiulan Yang, James A Fugate, Faith A Kalucki, Akiko Futakuchi-Tsuchida, Larry Couture, Keith W Vogel, Clifford A Astley, Audrey Baldessari, Jason Ogle, Creighton W Don, Zachary L Steinberg, Stephen P Seslar, Stephanie A Tuck, Hiroshi Tsuchida, Anna Naumova V, Sarah K Dupras, Milly S Lyu, James Lee, Dale W Hailey, Hans Reinecke, Lil Pabon, Benjamin H Fryer, Robb MacLellan, Scott Thies, Charles E Murry
Abstract

Pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte grafts can remuscularize substantial amounts of infarcted myocardium and beat in synchrony with the heart, but in some settings cause ventricular arrhythmias. It is unknown whether human cardiomyocytes can restore cardiac function in a physiologically relevant large animal model. Here we show that transplantation of ∼750 million cryopreserved human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hESC-CMs) enhances cardiac function in macaque monkeys with large myocardial infarctions. One month after hESC-CM transplantation, global left ventricular ejection fraction improved 10.6 ± 0.9% vs. 2.5 ± 0.8% in controls, and by 3 months there was an additional 12.4% improvement in treated vs. a 3.5% decline in controls. Grafts averaged 11.6% of infarct size, formed electromechanical junctions with the host heart, and by 3 months contained ∼99% ventricular myocytes. A subset of animals experienced graft-associated ventricular arrhythmias, shown by electrical mapping to originate from a point-source acting as an ectopic pacemaker. Our data demonstrate that remuscularization of the infarcted macaque heart with human myocardium provides durable improvement in left ventricular function.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nature biotechnology
Volume
36
Issue
7
Number of Pages
597-605
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1546-1696
DOI
10.1038/nbt.4162
Alternate Journal
Nat. Biotechnol.
PMID
29969440
PMCID
PMC6329375
Download citation