Sunday, December 16, 2012

Ordinary heart cells become 'biological pacemakers' with injection of single gene

Dec. 16, 2012 ? Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute researchers have reprogrammed ordinary heart cells to become exact replicas of highly specialized pacemaker cells by injecting a single gene (Tbx18)-a major step forward in the decade-long search for a biological therapy to correct erratic and failing heartbeats.

The advance will be published in the Jan 8 issue of Nature Biotechnology and also will be available on the journal's website.

"Although we and others have created primitive biological pacemakers before, this study is the first to show that a single gene can direct the conversion of heart muscle cells to genuine pacemaker cells. The new cells generated electrical impulses spontaneously and were indistinguishable from native pacemaker cells," said Hee Cheol Cho, PhD., a Heart Institute research scientist.

Pacemaker cells generate electrical activity that spreads to other heart cells in an orderly pattern to create rhythmic muscle contractions. If these cells go awry, the heart pumps erratically at best; patients healthy enough to undergo surgery often look to an electronic pacemaker as the only option for survival.

The heartbeat originates in the sinoatrial node (SAN) of the heart's right upper chamber, where pacemaker cells are clustered. Of the heart's 10 billion cells, fewer than 10,000 are pacemaker cells, often referred to as SAN cells. Once reprogrammed by the Tbx18 gene, the newly created pacemaker cells -- "induced SAN cells" or iSAN cells -- had all key features of native pacemakers and maintained their SAN-like characteristics even after the effects of the Tbx18 gene had faded.

But the Cedars-Sinai researchers, employing a virus engineered to carry a single gene (Tbx18) that plays a key role in embryonic pacemaker cell development, directly reprogrammed heart muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) to specialized pacemaker cells. The new cells took on the distinctive features and function of native pacemaker cells, both in lab cell reprogramming and in guinea pig studies.

Previous efforts to generate new pacemaker cells resulted in heart muscle cells that could beat on their own. Still, the modified cells were closer to ordinary muscle cells than to pacemaker cells. Other approaches employed embryonic stem cells to derive pacemaker cells. But, the risk of contaminating cancerous cells is a persistent hurdle to realizing a therapeutic potential with the embryonic stem cell-based approach. The new work, with astonishing simplicity, creates pacemaker cells that closely resemble the native ones free from the risk of cancer.

For his work on biological pacemaker technology, Cho, the article's last author, recently won the Louis N. and Arnold M. Katz Basic Research Prize, a young investigator award of the American Heart Association.

"This is the culmination of 10 years of work in our laboratory to build a biological pacemaker as an alternative to electronic pacing devices," said Eduardo Marb?n, MD, PhD, director of the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute and Mark S. Siegel Family Professor, a pioneer in cardiac stem cell research. A clinical trial of Marb?n's stem cell therapy for heart attack patients recently found the experimental treatment helped damaged hearts regrow healthy muscle.

If subsequent research confirms and supports findings of the pacemaker cell studies, the researchers said they believe therapy might be administered by injecting Tbx18 into a patient's heart or by creating pacemaker cells in the laboratory and transplanting them into the heart. But additional studies of safety and effectiveness must be conducted before human clinical trials could begin.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/3s94VJ1DgdM/121216132509.htm

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Candidates for Jackson seat vie for party backing

CHICAGO (AP) ? More than a dozen Democratic candidates went before Chicago-area party officials Saturday to try to win their endorsement for former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.'s seat ? and the campaign war chest that comes with such backing.

Among the candidates who could be chosen when Cook County Democratic officials cast their votes later Saturday are state Sen. Donne Trotter, who was recently arrested for carrying a gun into Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, and former U.S. Rep. Debbie Halvorson, who lost a primary challenge to Jackson earlier this year.

When Trotter was interviewed Saturday, none of the committee members asked him about the gun charge.

"I guess that's their way of saying that this is not an issue and ... that they're more concerned about other things that directly affect the district," said veteran Democratic consultant Delmarie Cobb, who sat in on the sessions.

In a sign that he was in serious contention, Trotter's question and answer session lasted twice as long as others.

"It was also clear that he had the support," Cobb said. "I don't know that he has the majority support, but he certainly had the support."

She added that in her own view it would be better for the party to opt for an open primary rather than endorse a candidate facing a felony charge and risk embarrassment if his legal troubles worsen.

The 2nd Congressional District, mostly in Cook County, is heavily Democratic. With the primary set for Feb. 26 and the general election on April 6, candidates will need to pull together money and volunteers much quicker than usual ? something with which the party can help.

But Don Rose, a longtime analyst of Chicago politics, said voters in the district haven't always supported the candidate backed by the party.

Each committee member's vote is weighted based on how many votes were cast in that person's ward or township in the last election. If no one wins the majority of the weighted votes, the party won't endorse anyone.

Chicago Alderman Anthony Beale, a candidate and voting ward committeeman, expects that to happen. Beale said of his own candidacy that he has broad support and "a base to build upon."

Jackson resigned from the U.S. House last month, weeks after easily winning re-election despite not campaigning beyond a robocall or being seen publicly in months. He took medical leave in June for treatment of bipolar disorder. His attorneys have also said they are cooperating with federal authorities on an investigation; they have not given details on what it involves.

Jackson's wife, Alderman Sandi Jackson, did not appear at Saturday's meeting and designated someone else to cast her vote.

Trotter said this week he has the support of the official whose vote carries the most weight ? Thornton Township Democratic boss Frank Zuccarelli ? and one other committee member.

Trotter was arrested Dec. 5 when Transportation Security Administration officers discovered an unloaded .25-caliber Beretta handgun and ammunition in a garment bag during routine X-ray screening.

Trotter's attorney says he has the gun for his separate work with a security firm and that he forgot it was in the bag.

Each candidate had five minutes Saturday to make a pitch and faced questions from committee members. Part of that process was open to the public. The committee was to go into closed session to discuss and cast their votes later in the afternoon.

Other candidates include state Sen. Toi Hutchinson, former state Rep. Robin Kelly and former U.S. Rep. Mel Reynolds, whose record includes convictions for fraud and having sex with a minor. Reynolds has said he believes voters will forgive his mistakes.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/candidates-jackson-seat-vie-party-backing-221732634--election.html

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