PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Isolation of human explant derived cardiac stem cells from cryopreserved heart tissue.

  • Robyn Jackson,
  • Seth Mount,
  • Bin Ye,
  • Audrey E Mayfield,
  • Vincent Chan,
  • Munir Boodhwani,
  • Ross A Davies,
  • Haissam Haddad,
  • Darryl R Davis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176000
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. e0176000

Abstract

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The value of preserving high quality bio specimens for fundamental research is significant as linking cellular and molecular changes to clinical and epidemiological data has fueled many recent advances in medicine. Unfortunately, storage of traditional biospecimens is limited to fixed samples or isolated genetic material. Here, we report the effect of cryopreservation of routine myocardial biopsies on explant derived cardiac stem cell (EDC) culture outcomes. We demonstrate that immediate cryopreservation or delayed cryopreservation after suspension within cardioplegia for 12 hours did not alter EDC yields, proliferative capacity, antigenic phenotype or paracrine signature. Cryopreservation had negligible effects on the ability of EDCs to adopt a cardiac lineage, stimulate new vessel growth, attract circulating angiogenic cells and repair injured myocardium. Finally, cryopreservation did not influence the ability of EDCs to undergo genetic reprogramming into inducible pluripotent stem cells. This study establishes a means of storing cardiac samples as a retrievable live cell source for cardiac repair or disease modeling.