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Proliferation and Maturation: Janus and the Art of Cardiac Tissue Engineering.

Bhairab N SinghDogacan YucelBayardo I GarayElena G TolkachevaMichael KybaRita C R PerlingeiroJop H van BerloBrenda M Ogle
Published in: Circulation research (2023)
During cardiac development and morphogenesis, cardiac progenitor cells differentiate into cardiomyocytes that expand in number and size to generate the fully formed heart. Much is known about the factors that regulate initial differentiation of cardiomyocytes, and there is ongoing research to identify how these fetal and immature cardiomyocytes develop into fully functioning, mature cells. Accumulating evidence indicates that maturation limits proliferation and conversely proliferation occurs rarely in cardiomyocytes of the adult myocardium. We term this oppositional interplay the proliferation-maturation dichotomy. Here we review the factors that are involved in this interplay and discuss how a better understanding of the proliferation-maturation dichotomy could advance the utility of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes for modeling in 3-dimensional engineered cardiac tissues to obtain truly adult-level function.
Keyphrases
  • signaling pathway
  • high glucose
  • left ventricular
  • induced apoptosis
  • tissue engineering
  • heart failure
  • preterm infants
  • hiv infected
  • drug induced