UCalgary
researchers make a fundamental scientific discovery that could lead to new ways
to repair damaged hearts
July 16, 2019 -- University of Calgary researchers are the first to discover a previously unidentified cell population in the pericardial fluid found inside the sac around the heart. The discovery could lead to new treatments for patients with injured hearts. The study led by Drs. Paul Kubes, PhD, Justin Deniset, PhD and Paul Fedak, MD, PhD is published in the internationally recognized journal Immunity.
July 16, 2019 -- University of Calgary researchers are the first to discover a previously unidentified cell population in the pericardial fluid found inside the sac around the heart. The discovery could lead to new treatments for patients with injured hearts. The study led by Drs. Paul Kubes, PhD, Justin Deniset, PhD and Paul Fedak, MD, PhD is published in the internationally recognized journal Immunity.
The Kubes lab, in collaboration with the Fedak
lab, found that a specific cell, a Gata6+ pericardial cavity macrophage, helps
heal an injured heart in mice. The cell was discovered in the pericardial fluid
(sac around the heart) of a mouse with heart injury. Working with Fedak, a
cardiac surgeon and incoming Director of the Libin Cardiovascular Institute of
Alberta, the same cells were also found within the human pericardium of people
with injured hearts, confirming that the repair cells offer the promise of a
new therapy for patients with heart disease.
"The fuel that powered this study is the
funding from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, the collaboration
between two major research institutes at CSM (Snyder and Libin) and the
important contribution of philanthropy from the Libin and Snyder families to
obtain imaging equipment available to very few programs globally," says
Kubes, the Director of the Snyder Institute for Chronic Diseases at the Cumming
School of Medicine and Professor in the Department of Physiology and
Pharmacology.
Heart doctors had never before explored the
possibility that cells just outside the heart could participate in healing and
repair of hearts after injury. Unlike other organs, the heart has a very
limited capacity to repair itself which is why heart disease is the number one
cause of death in North America.
"Our discovery of a new cell that can
help heal injured heart muscle will open the door to new therapies and hope for
the millions of people who suffer from heart disease. We always knew that the
heart sits inside a sac filled with a strange fluid. Now we know that this
pericardial fluid is rich with healing cells. These cells may hold the secret
to repair and regeneration of new heart muscle. The possibilities for further
discovery and innovative new therapies are exciting and important," says
Fedak, a professor in the Department of Cardiac Sciences.
Working together and bringing expertise across
disciplines the basic researchers working with the cardiac surgeon, clinician
researcher, have identified the cell in less than three years. A relatively
quick time frame to move research from the lab and animal models to people.
Next Fedak hopes to recruit a basic scientist
to move the research to a broader study of human heart repair. This new program
will extend the collaboration between basic and clinical research to find
potential new therapeutics to improve heart repair.
No comments:
Post a Comment