Allopurinol/uricase and ibuprofen enhance engraftment of cardiomyocyte-enriched human embryonic stem cells and improve cardiac function following myocardial injury. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: A major limitation of stem cell transfer is early donor-cell death. Here, we seek to enhance myocardial repair following injury through transplantation of cardiomyocyte-enriched human embryonic stem cells (hESC) and recipient treatment with cytoprotective (allopurinol+uricase) and anti-inflammatory (ibuprofen) agents. METHODS: We injected 10(6) (15% hESC-derived cardiomyocytes) green fluorescent protein (GFP+) hESC in the infarcted area following left anterior descending artery (LAD)-ligation in SCID-beige mice. In Group I, 1.6 mg allopurinol and 0.2 mg of uricase were injected i.p. for 3 days prior to cell transplantation. In Group II, 0.35 mg/ml of ibuprofen were added to the drinking water before and after cell implantation. In Group III, the LAD was ligated and allopurinol/uricase was administered without cell treatment. In Group IV, ibuprofen was added to the drinking water and the LAD was ligated without additional cell treatment. In Group V, only cells were transplanted. Group VI involved infarcted controls and Group VII involved sham-operated mice (all groups: n=5). We evaluated heart function (ejection fraction (EF)) by MRI (4.7 T) 3 weeks later. The hearts were harvested for histology. RESULTS: Differentiated hESC formed clusters and expressed alpha-sarcomeric actin and Connexin 43. Cell treatment improved heart function, which was best in the ibuprofen- and allopurinol-treated groups (+cell transfer), compared to the infarcted controls [EF: Group I: 76.6+/-8.6%, Group II: 78.6+/-7.3%, Group III: 58.1+/-5.7%, Group IV: 53.9+/-5.2%, Group V: 57.7+/-7.5%, Group VI: 43.5+/-4.3%, and Group VII: 66.3+/-7.8%]. We did not observe tumors in any group. CONCLUSIONS: Allopurinol/uricase and ibuprofen enhance differentiated hESC-engraftment and myocardial restoration following transplantation into the injured heart.

publication date

  • December 6, 2005

Research

keywords

  • Allopurinol
  • Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal
  • Ibuprofen
  • Myocardial Ischemia
  • Myocytes, Cardiac
  • Stem Cell Transplantation
  • Urate Oxidase

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 29244488216

PubMed ID

  • 16337396

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 29

issue

  • 1