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Establishment of a human fetal cardiac myocyte cell line
Authors:Yi-Chong Wang  Nicolas Neckelmann  Ann Mayne  Ahvie Herskowitz  Alagarsamy Srinivasan  Kenneth W. Sell  Aftab Ahmed-Ansari
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pathology and Winship Cancer Center, Emory University School of Medicine, 1327 Clifton Road, N.E., 30322 Atlanta, Georgia;(2) Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 21205 Baltimore, Maryland;(3) The Wistar Institute, 19104 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Abstract:Summary Human cardiac myocytes undergo degeneration, cytolysis, and necrosis in a number of clinical disease conditions such as myocarditis, dilated cardiomyopathy, and during episodes of cardiac allograft rejection. The precise cellular, biochemical, and molecular mechanisms that lead to such abnormalities in myocytes have been difficult to investigate because at present it is not possible to obtain and maintain viable cell cultures of human adult cardiac myocytes in vitro. However, human fetal cardiac myocytes are relatively easy to maintain and culture in vitro, but their limited availability and growth, variability from one preparation to another, and varying degrees of contamination with endothelial and epithelial cell types have made it difficult to obtain reliable data on the effect of cardiotropic viruses and cardiotoxic drugs on such myocytes. These thoughts prompted us to attempt to derive a cell line of human cardiac origin. Highly enriched human fetal cardiac myocytes were transfected with the plasmids pSV2Neo and pRSVTAg and gave rise to a cell line (W1) which has been maintained in culture for 1 yr. Morphologic and phenotypic analyses of W1 cells by flow microfluorometry and immunoperoxidase techniques indicate that the W1 cell line shares many properties of human fetal cardiac myocytes, but appears not to react with specific antibodies known to react with markers unique to human endothelial, epithelial, skeletal muscle, and dendritic cells. These preliminary data suggest that the W1 cells may provide a unique source of an established cell line that shares many properties ascribed to human cardiac myocytes. This study was supported by grant 1RO1-25566-03 from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, to A. Ahmed-Ansari and by a Grant-in-Aid from the American Heart Association, Georgia Affiliate, to Nicolas Neckelmann.
Keywords:human cardiac myocyte cell line  transfection
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