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Title: Protein patch helps build new heart muscle, improve cardiac function
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Sep 17, 2015
Author: Stephen Feller
Post Date: 2015-09-17 06:24:46 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 48
Comments: 2

In animals, the protein restored heart functmprove cardiac functionion significantly and prevented some scarring of the organ after a heart attack.

SAN DIEGO, Sept. 16 (UPI) -- Most people survive heart attacks immediately, but the damage to the muscle and scarring that results takes a toll that eventually leads to heart failure -- of which many patients die within five to six years of developing.

Using a protein that helps cardiac cells replicate, researchers found they can spur the growth of new cardiac muscle by delivering the protein to the heart using an implantable patch that returned animal hearts to nearly normal function within weeks.

"Treatments don't deal with this fundamental problem -- and consequently many patients progressively lose heart function, leading to long-term disability and eventually death," said Dr. Pilar Ruiz-Lozano, a professor at Stanford University, in a press release.

Researchers looked to a variety of animals whose hearts appear to have regenerative qualities, eventually looking at epicardial cells, which are found in the outer layers of the heart, and stimulate existing heart muscle cells to replicate. Using mass spectrometry, the researchers identified Follistatin-like 1, or FSTL1, as the protein motivating replication.

The researchers then developed a patch made of collagen that has the elasticity of fetal heart tissue and can slowly release FSTL1 from its center. The patch was tested with mice and pigs, showing that it stimulated new muscle growth in the animals after they had had a heart attack.

In pigs who'd had a heart attack, blood flow in the left ventricle of their hearts dropped from a normal rate of 50 percent to 30 percent. Researchers implanted the patch within a week of the heart attack. The animals showed less scarring on their hearts and the organ's function was restored to a stable 40 percent.

Researches say it might be possible to test the patch in human clinical trials as early as 2017.

The study is published in Nature. Like Us on Facebook for more stories from UPI.com Related UPI Stories

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

Source link, please, thanks.

Lod  posted on  2015-09-17   8:32:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 1.

#2. To: Lod (#1)

All UPI posted stories sign off with link: http://upi.com. If you're particularly interested in a topic then Google search it and get usually better perspectives,i.e:

Scientists create 'protein patch' that repairs damage caused by heart attack Published: Thursday 17 September 2015 at 7am PST Heart Disease Cardiovascular / Cardiology Medical Innovation Biology / Biochemistry add your opinion email MNT featured Academic journal Researchers have developed a "protein patch" that they say reversed damage to mouse and pig hearts caused by heart attack. The new creation could be set to enter human clinical trials as early as 2017. [Heart muscle cells] The protein patch led to the regeneration of new heart muscle cells - highlighted in green - in mice that suffered heart attack. Image credit: UCSD

Prof. Pilar Ruiz-Lozano, of Stanford University, CA, and colleagues publish the details of their creation in the journal Nature.

During a heart attack, or myocardial infarction, heart muscle cells - knowns as cardiomyocytes - suffer damage and die due to lack of oxygen from reduced blood flow. In adult mammals, cardiomyocytes are unable to fully regenerate following heart attack, and as a result, the heart muscle forms scar tissue in an attempt to heal.

At present, there is no treatment to effectively reverse damage caused by heart attack - a condition that affects around 735,000 Americans every year. Depending on the severity, such damage may lead to further complications, including arrhythmias - abnormal heart rhythms - and heart failure.

In their study, Prof. Ruiz-Lozano and colleagues set out to develop a treatment that addresses the inability of cardiomyocytes to regenerate.

Past studies in zebrafish, whose heart cells have the ability to regenerate, have revealed that the epicardium - the inner layer of the pericardium, which lines the wall of the heart muscles - plays a role in the regeneration of cardiomyocytes.

"We wanted to know what in the epicardium stimulates the myocardium, the muscle of the heart, to regenerate," says Prof. Ruiz-Lozano. Patch embedded with FSTL1 protein led to cardiomyocyte regeneration

By analyzing the epicardial cells of healthy mammalian hearts, the team found that these cells triggered replication of cardiomyocytes.

The team used mass spectrometry to analyze more than 300 proteins produced by epicardial cells, in an attempt to identify a single compound that may be responsible for cardiomyocyte regeneration.

Fast facts about heart attack

Someone in the US has a heart attack every 43 seconds Coronary artery disease is the primary cause of heart attack Of the 735,000 heart attacks that occur in the US each year, 525,000 are a first heart attack.

Learn more about heart attack

Applying high throughout technology to the shortlisted candidates, the team identified a natural protein called Follistatin-like 1 (FSTL1) in epicardial tissue that stimulates cardiomyocytes to replicate. The team found, however, that after a heart attack, this protein diminishes in the epicardium.

The team then came up with a novel idea to turn their findings into a therapeutic strategy for heart attack. They created a patch made of acellular collagen that simulates fetal epicardial tissue and is embedded with FSTL1. The patch and the FSTL1 protein is slowly absorbed when applied to a damaged heart.

On testing the patch on the hearts of pigs and mice that had been damaged by heart attack, the team found it began to trigger regeneration of existing heart muscle cells and growth of new blood vessels within 2-4 weeks. This improved the overall heart function of the animals, as well as their survival - even when the patch was applied a week after heart attack.

"Many [of the animals] were so sick prior to getting the patch that they would have been candidates for heart transplantation," notes Prof. Ruiz-Lozano.

Study co-author Mark Mercola, professor of bioengineering at UCSD, says the team is "excited" by the findings, stating that the patch is "clinically viable" and "clinically attractive." What is more, because the patch is acellular - meaning it contains no cells - a patient would not need to use immunosuppressive medication.

Prof. Ruiz-Lozano believes the findings pave the way for a "completely revolutionary" treatment for heart attack patients, and the team hopes the patch will enter human clinical trials within the next 2 years.

The authors conclude:

"The data suggest that the loss of epicardial FSTL1 is a maladaptive response to injury, and that its restoration would be an effective way to reverse myocardial death and remodeling following myocardial infarction in humans."

Medical News Today recently reported on new guidelines from the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommending that adults aged 50-59 take low-dose aspirin daily in order to prevent first heart attack or stroke.

Written by Honor Whiteman

Copyright: Medical News Today Read more breaking health news on our homepage

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/299643.php

Above topped Google's search results:

4 hours ago - A prototype patch could help the heart repair itself after a heart ... reveals the protein-infused patch encourages the growth of healthy cells and ... Protein Patch helpful in repairing Heart Muscles | NYC Today nycity.today/.../285348-protein-patch-helpful-repairing-heart-muscles 12 hours ago - A protein patch has been developed by researchers at Stanford University and the research team claims that it can repair heart muscles. Delivering missing protein heals damaged hearts in animals ... https://med.stanford.edu/.../delivering-missing-protein-heals-damaged-he... 1 day ago - Researchers have discovered that a particular protein, Fstl1, plays a key role in ... Within two to four weeks of receiving the patch, heart muscle cells began to ... Collagen patch speeds repair of damaged heart tissue in mice. A simple protein patch could heal damage caused by heart ... http://www.babwnews.com/.../a-si...-could-heal-damage-caus... 13 hours ago - Stanford researchers have created a simple patch that could regenerate damaged heart tissue in as little as two weeks after a heart attack. Protein Patch could be helpful in repairing Heart Muscles http://krwgnews22.com/health.../...-helpful-in-repairing-h... 11 hours ago - Scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine and their colleagues have enabled damaged heart tissue in animals to regenerate by ... Cardiac biology: A protein for healing infarcted hearts - Nature http://www.nature.com/nature/jou...ent/full/nature15217.html 1 day ago - But the protein Fstl1, which is normally expressed in the heart's ... scar — a quick fix that progressively decreases the heart's pumping capacity. Protein Patch can repair and rebuild damaged Heart ... http://www.thenewsrecorder.com/....air-rebuild-damaged-hea... 10 hours ago - A protein infused patch can help repair damage caused by heart attack. According to a report, early research has shown encouraging signs of a ... Repairing The Heart With A Protein-Hydrogel Combo ... http://cen.acs.org/articles/93/....otein-Hydrogel-Combo.html Aug 19, 2015 - Repairing The Heart With A Protein-Hydrogel Combo ... be delivered via a patch fixed on the diseased heart instead of injecting it into muscle. Protein Patch Could Rebuild Muscle After Heart Attack http://www.immortal.org/17203/pr...uild-muscle-heart-attack/

14 hours ago - A protein-infused patch could help repair damage caused by a heart attack, scientists say. According to BBC, early research shows that a ...

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This is best heart repair news yet since patch could be inserted via a catheter, not requiring heart surgery. If it works in pigs then should work in humans, especially if it's true that we're a hybrid from a cross between a boar and a monkey as one scientist claims.

Tatarewicz  posted on  2015-09-18 00:51:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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