PUBLICATION
Investigating the Transient Regenerative Potential of Cardiac Muscle Using a Neonatal Pig Partial Apical Resection Model
- Authors
- Copeland, K.M., Brazile, B.L., Butler, J.R., Cooley, J., Brinkman-Ferguson, E., Claude, A., Lin, S., Rais-Rohani, S., Welch, B., McMahan, S.R., Nguyen, K.T., Hong, Y., Ramaswamy, S., Liu, Z.P., Bajona, P., Peltz, M., Liao, J.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-220826-7
- Date
- 2022
- Source
- Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) 9(8): (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- Keywords
- cardiac fibrosis, cardiomyocytes, neonatal pig heart, partial apex resection, proliferative mesenchymal cells, transient cardiac regeneration
- MeSH Terms
- none
- PubMed
- 36004926 Full text @ Bioengineering (Basel)
Citation
Copeland, K.M., Brazile, B.L., Butler, J.R., Cooley, J., Brinkman-Ferguson, E., Claude, A., Lin, S., Rais-Rohani, S., Welch, B., McMahan, S.R., Nguyen, K.T., Hong, Y., Ramaswamy, S., Liu, Z.P., Bajona, P., Peltz, M., Liao, J. (2022) Investigating the Transient Regenerative Potential of Cardiac Muscle Using a Neonatal Pig Partial Apical Resection Model. Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland). 9(8):.
Abstract
Researchers have shown that adult zebrafish have the potential to regenerate 20% of the ventricular muscle within two months of apex resection, and neonatal mice have the capacity to regenerate their heart after apex resection up until day 7 after birth. The goal of this study was to determine if large mammals (porcine heart model) have the capability to fully regenerate a resected portion of the left ventricular apex during the neonatal stage, and if so, how long the regenerative potential persists. A total of 36 piglets were divided into the following groups: 0-day control and surgical groups and seven-day control and surgical groups. For the apex removal groups, each piglet was subjected to a partial wall thickness resection (~30% of the ventricular wall thickness). Heart muscle function was assessed via transthoracic echocardiograms; the seven-day surgery group experienced a decrease in ejection fraction and fractional shortening. Upon gross necropsy, for piglets euthanized four weeks post-surgery, all 0-day-old hearts showed no signs of scarring or any indication of the induced injury. Histological analysis confirmed that piglets in the 0-day surgery group exhibited various degrees of regeneration, with half of the piglets showing full regeneration and the other half showing partial regeneration. However, each piglet in the seven-day surgery group demonstrated epicardial fibrosis along with moderate to severe dissecting interstitial fibrosis, which was accompanied by an abundant collagenous extracellular matrix as the result of a scar formation in the resection site. Histology of one 0-day apex resection piglet (briefly lain on and accidentally killed by the mother sow three days post-surgery) revealed dense, proliferative mesenchymal cells bordering the fibrin and hemorrhage zone and differentiating toward immature cardiomyocytes. We further examined the heart explants at 5-days post-surgery (5D PO) and 1-week post-surgery (1W PO) to assess the repair progression. For the 0-day surgery piglets euthanized at 5D PO and 1W PO, half had abundant proliferating mesenchymal cells, suggesting active regeneration, while the other half showed increased extracellular collagen. The seven-day surgery piglets euthanized at 5D PO, and 1W PO showed evidence of greatly increased extracellular collagen, while some piglets had proliferating mesenchymal cells, suggesting a regenerative effort is ongoing while scar formation seems to predominate. In short, our qualitative findings suggest that the piglets lose the full myocardial regenerative potential by 7 days after birth, but greatly preserve the regenerative potential within 1 day post-partum.
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Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
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