The Open Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Journal
2012, 5 : 17-24Published online 2012 April 19. DOI: 10.2174/1875043501205010017
Publisher ID: TOTERMJ-5-17
Early Cell Loss Associated with Mesenchymal Stem Cell Cardiomyoplasty
ABSTRACT
Background: Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) show potential for therapeutic cellular cardiomyoplasty. However, a range of delivery methods, including direct intramyocardial injection, have resulted in poor engraftment in vivo. We used the in vivo rat heart model to study hMSC engraftment and retention in a normal beating heart. Materials and Methods: HMSCs transfected with green fluorescent protein were injected into the left ventricle (LV) of immunocompetent rats. Hearts were cryopreserved 30 minutes (Group A), 24 hours (Group B), and 5 days (Group C) post hMSC delivery. HMSC retention was estimated using confocal fluorescence microscopy and immunohistochemistry. Measured values were compared to projected GFP-positive cellular volumes. Immunohistochemical analyses probed for the presence of human cells with human prolyl 4-hydroxylase beta (p4hβ) and an immune response with murine monocyte/macrophage antigen (CD68). Results: HMSC retention decreased significantly from 30 minutes to 5 days (p<0.05). In Group A the projected GFP positive cellular volume of 31% correlated with measured values and was significantly greater than the 1% predicted cellular volume in Group C. Moreover, human p4hβ was detected in Groups A and B, and not in Group C. Conversely, CD68 was detected in Groups B and C and not in Group A. Conclusions: In immunocompetent rats, engraftment and retention of hMSCs delivered intramyocardially significantly declines over a five day period. The influx of monocytes/macrophages suggests an unfavorable micro-environment for exogenous stem cell survival, confirmed by the absence of human cells detected five days post injection.