Human left ventricular cardiac fibroblasts undergo a dynamic shift in secretome and gene expression toward a cardiac myofibroblast phenotype during early passage in typical culture expansion conditions.

Eric G Schmuck,Sushmita Roy, Tianhua Zhou, Delani Wille, Sophie Mixon Reeves,James Conklin,Amish N Raval

Cytotherapy(2023)

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摘要
Cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) are critical components of the cardiac niche and primarily responsible for assembly and maintenance of the cardiac extracellular matrix (ECM). CFs are increasingly of interest for tissue engineering and drug development applications, as they provide synergistic support to cardiomyocytes through direct cell-to-cell signaling and cell-to-ECM interactions via soluble factors, including cytokines, growth factors and extracellular vesicles. CFs can be activated to a cardiac myofibroblast (CMF) phenotype upon injury or stimulation with transforming growth factor beta 1. Once activated, CMFs assemble collagen-rich ECM, which is vitally important to stabilize scar formation following myocardial infarction, for example. Although there is greater experience with culture expansion of CFs among non-human strains, very little is known about human CF-to-CMF transitions and expression patterns during culture expansion. In this study, we evaluated for shifts in inflammatory and angiogenic expression profiles of human CFs in typical culture expansion conditions. Understanding shifts in cellular expression patterns during CF culture expansion is critically important to establish quality benchmarks and optimize large-scale manufacturing for future clinical applications.
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