論文

基本情報

氏名 逢坂 大樹
氏名(カナ) オウサカ ダイキ
氏名(英語) Ousaka Daiki
所属 生命科学部 医療技術学科
職名 准教授
researchmap研究者コード B000342311
researchmap機関 岡山理科大学

題名

Cardiosphere-derived exosomal microRNAs for myocardial repair in pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy.

単著・共著の別

 

著者

Kenta Hirai
Daiki Ousaka
Yosuke Fukushima
Maiko Kondo
Takahiro Eitoku
Yusuke Shigemitsu
Mayuko Hara
Kenji Baba
Tatsuo Iwasaki
Shingo Kasahara
Shinichi Ohtsuki
Hidemasa Oh

概要

Although cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) improve cardiac function and outcomes in patients with single ventricle physiology, little is known about their safety and therapeutic benefit in children with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). We aimed to determine the safety and efficacy of CDCs in a porcine model of DCM and translate the preclinical results into this patient population. A swine model of DCM using intracoronary injection of microspheres created cardiac dysfunction. Forty pigs were randomized as preclinical validation of the delivery method and CDC doses, and CDC-secreted exosome (CDCex)-mediated cardiac repair was analyzed. A phase 1 safety cohort enrolled five pediatric patients with DCM and reduced ejection fraction to receive CDC infusion. The primary endpoint was to assess safety, and the secondary outcome measure was change in cardiac function. Improved cardiac function and reduced myocardial fibrosis were noted in animals treated with CDCs compared with placebo. These functional benefits were mediated via CDCex that were highly enriched with proangiogenic and cardioprotective microRNAs (miRNAs), whereas isolated CDCex did not recapitulate these reparative effects. One-year follow-up of safety lead-in stage was completed with favorable profile and preliminary efficacy outcomes. Increased CDCex-derived miR-146a-5p expression was associated with the reduction in myocardial fibrosis via suppression of proinflammatory cytokines and transcripts. Collectively, intracoronary CDC administration is safe and improves cardiac function through CDCex in a porcine model of DCM. The safety lead-in results in patients provide a translational framework for further studies of randomized trials and CDCex-derived miRNAs as potential paracrine mediators underlying this therapeutic strategy.

発表雑誌等の名称

Science translational medicine

出版者

 

12

573

開始ページ

 

終了ページ

 

発行又は発表の年月

2020-12-09

査読の有無

 

招待の有無

 

記述言語

英語

掲載種別

研究論文(学術雑誌)

ISSN

 

ID:DOI

10.1126/scitranslmed.abb3336

ID:NAID(CiNiiのID)

 

ID:PMID

 

JGlobalID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCIDのPut Code

 

DBLP ID