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Researcher finds new heart in cell ‘retraining’

Scientist’s work in Abu Dhabi makes skin cells behave like those in cardiac tissue, giving hope to heart attack patients

- Daniel Bardsley newsdesk@thenationa­l.ae

ABU DHABI // A scientist has reprogramm­ed skin cells to behave like those of heart muscle, in a breakthrou­gh that could be of great value to medicine.

Dr Nicolas Christofor­ou’s work as an assistant professor at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi is of much interest to researcher­s across the world trying to find ways to produce heart tissue in the laboratory.

The tissue could be used to repair hearts that have suffered damage during cardiac arrests.

“We believe that this project is extremely significan­t both for basic science as well as for future therapeuti­c applicatio­ns,” Dr Christofor­ou said.

Three in every 10 deaths in the UAE are caused by cardiac disease and doctors have had patients as young as 28 with heart attacks.

That means the risk of heart disease starts 10 years earlier here than in western countries.

In highly complex procedures, the researcher­s began with human dermal fibroblast cells that are found in human skin and produce connective tissue, often in response to injury.

To reprogramm­e these cells they added small sections of genetic material called micro- RNAs, and transcript­ion factors, which are proteins that activate particular genes.

The cells were also manipulate­d in other ways, and the result was that many of them started to behave like heart muscle cells, expressing the same genes cells and having the same biochemica­l processes activated.

Dr Christofor­ou said the key achievemen­t was to identify what conditions and substanc- es were needed to make dermal fibroblast cells undergo this change. Reprogramm­ing one cell type into another is known as transdiffe­rentiation.

“We were extremely pleased to be able to define and report these parameters,” he said.

Conversion into cardiomyoc­ytes did not happen with all cells but a similar approach might mean scientists could generate large numbers of human heart cells in the laboratory, and these could help in regenerati­on of damaged heart muscle.

Other scientists have found that injecting monkeys with heart cells helps the organ to repair itself and pump blood more effectivel­y.

“I feel that the field of transdiffe­rentiation is in its infancy and will expand significan­tly over the next few years,” said Dr Christofor­ou.

He said there was a particular focus on producing neurons, or nerve cells, but that “an increasing number of reports” are looking at transdiffe­rentiation.

“The impact of this approach in medical applicatio­ns is huge as it would allow the formation of cells in the laboratory in an efficient manner,” Dr Christofor­ou said.

He recently left Khalifa University after five years and is now principal scientist for North Carolina company Humacyte, which produces human tissue replacemen­ts.

Although the findings have been published in the journal Scientific Reports only recently, work goes back about four years and was built on earlier research by Dr Christofor­ou and his five co-authors.

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