Publication | Open Access
Cardiomyocytes fuse with surrounding noncardiomyocytes and reenter the cell cycle
129
Citations
45
References
2004
Year
Cardiac MuscleEndothelial CellsAdult Stem CellCardiac Progenitor CellsCell FusionCell CycleCellular PhysiologyStem CellsCardiologyCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesCardiomyopathyCell DivisionCell BiologyCardiac PathologyInduced Pluripotent Stem CellDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyStem Cell ResearchCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicineEmbryonic Stem CellExtracellular Matrix
The concept of the plasticity or transdifferentiation of adult stem cells has been challenged by the phenomenon of cell fusion. In this work, we examined whether neonatal cardiomyocytes fuse with various somatic cells including endothelial cells, cardiac fibroblasts, bone marrow cells, and endothelial progenitor cells spontaneously in vitro. When cardiomyocytes were cocultured with endothelial cells or cardiac fibroblasts, they fused and showed phenotypes of cardiomyocytes. Furthermore, cardiomyocytes reentered the G2-M phase in the cell cycle after fusing with proliferative noncardiomyocytes. Transplanted endothelial cells or skeletal muscle-derived cells fused with adult cardiomyocytes in vivo. In the cryoinjured heart, there were Ki67-positive cells that expressed both cardiac and endothelial lineage marker proteins. These results suggest that cardiomyocytes fuse with other cells and enter the cell cycle by maintaining their phenotypes.
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