Process for expansion and division of heart cells identified

Wednesday, February 18, 2009 - 07:21 in Biology & Nature

Researchers at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (GICD) and the University of California, San Francisco have unravelled a complex signalling process that reveals how different types of cells interact to create a heart. It has long been known that heart muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) actively divide and expand in the embryo, but after birth this proliferative capacity is permanently lost. How this transition occurs has not been known. In the current issue of the journal Developmental Cell, the scientists show that the secret to this switch lies in the cells that surround the muscle cells, known as fibroblasts, which send signals that tell cardiomyocytes to divide or get bigger in size. Manipulation of these signals may be able to induce cardiomyocytes to divide again for regenerative purposes after heart attacks...

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