making cardiomyocytes with your chemistry set: Small molecule-induced cardiogenesis in somatic cells
- Abstract
- Cell transplantation is an attractive potential therapy
for heart diseases. For example, myocardial infarction
(MI) is a leading cause of mortality in many countries.
Numerous medical interventions have been developed
to stabilize patients with MI and, although this has
increased survival rates, there is currently no clinically
approved method to reverse the loss of cardiac muscle
cells (cardiomyocytes) that accompanies this disease.
Cell transplantation has been proposed as a method to
replace cardiomyocytes, but a safe and reliable source
of cardiogenic cells is required. An ideal source would
be the patients’ own somatic tissue cells, which could
be converted into cardiogenic cells and transplanted
into the site of MI. However, these are difficult to
produce in large quantities and standardized protocols
to produce cardiac cells would be advantageous for the
research community. To achieve these research goals,
small molecules represent attractive tools to control cell
behavior. In this editorial, we introduce the use of small
molecules in stem cell research and summarize their
application to the induction of cardiogenesis in noncardiac
cells. Exciting new developments in this field
are discussed, which we hope will encourage cardiac
stem cell biologists to further consider employing small
molecules in their culture protocols.
- Author(s)
- Kim WH; Da-Woon Jung; Williams, Darren R
- Issued Date
- 2015-03
- Type
- Article
- DOI
- 10.4330/wjc.v7.i3.125
- URI
- https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/14786
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