Objective Myocardial repair following injury in mammals is restricted such that damaged areas are replaced by scar tissue, impairing cardiac function. MRL mice exhibit exceptional regenerative healing in an ear punch wound model. Some myocardial repair with restoration of heart function has also been reported following cryoinjury. Increased cardiomyocyte proliferation and a foetal liver stem cell population were implicated. We investigated molecular mechanisms facilitating myocardial repair in MRL mice to identify potential therapeutic targets in non-regenerative species. Methods Expressions of specific cell-cycle regulators that might account for regeneration (CDKs 1, 2, 4 and 6; cyclins A, E, D1 and B1; p21, p27 and E2F5) were compared...
Introduction: Although traditionally adult cardiomyocytes are thought to be unable to divide, recent...
The regenerative capacity of human myocardium is unable to compensate adequately forth significant l...
Following ischemic injury, the myocardium undergoes extensive cardiomyocyte loss, scar formation and...
Objective Myocardial repair following injury in mammals is restricted such that damaged areas are re...
OBJECTIVE: The MRL mouse strain shows extraordinary wound healing capacities. Some years ago, Lefero...
Previous studies crowned the MRL mouse as a â€oesuper healing― strain due to its superior capaciti...
After myocardial infarction (MI) the human heart is unable to regenerate lost tissue, leading to sca...
The significance of cardiac stem cell (CSC) populations for cardiac regeneration remains disputed. H...
Heart failure, as a result of myocardial infarction, is a major cause of mortality in human. The mai...
The cellular and molecular mechanisms that are responsible for the poor regenerative capacity of the...
Aims: Cardiovascular diseases caused by loss of functional cardiomyocytes (CMs) are a major cause of...
Cardiac repair following myocardial injury is restricted due to the limited proliferative potential ...
The heart is the first functional organ to develop, and cardiomyocytes (cardiac muscle cells) are th...
Introduction: Although traditionally adult cardiomyocytes are thought to be unable to divide, recent...
SummaryAlthough the mammalian heart is one of the least regenerative organs in the body, recent evid...
Introduction: Although traditionally adult cardiomyocytes are thought to be unable to divide, recent...
The regenerative capacity of human myocardium is unable to compensate adequately forth significant l...
Following ischemic injury, the myocardium undergoes extensive cardiomyocyte loss, scar formation and...
Objective Myocardial repair following injury in mammals is restricted such that damaged areas are re...
OBJECTIVE: The MRL mouse strain shows extraordinary wound healing capacities. Some years ago, Lefero...
Previous studies crowned the MRL mouse as a â€oesuper healing― strain due to its superior capaciti...
After myocardial infarction (MI) the human heart is unable to regenerate lost tissue, leading to sca...
The significance of cardiac stem cell (CSC) populations for cardiac regeneration remains disputed. H...
Heart failure, as a result of myocardial infarction, is a major cause of mortality in human. The mai...
The cellular and molecular mechanisms that are responsible for the poor regenerative capacity of the...
Aims: Cardiovascular diseases caused by loss of functional cardiomyocytes (CMs) are a major cause of...
Cardiac repair following myocardial injury is restricted due to the limited proliferative potential ...
The heart is the first functional organ to develop, and cardiomyocytes (cardiac muscle cells) are th...
Introduction: Although traditionally adult cardiomyocytes are thought to be unable to divide, recent...
SummaryAlthough the mammalian heart is one of the least regenerative organs in the body, recent evid...
Introduction: Although traditionally adult cardiomyocytes are thought to be unable to divide, recent...
The regenerative capacity of human myocardium is unable to compensate adequately forth significant l...
Following ischemic injury, the myocardium undergoes extensive cardiomyocyte loss, scar formation and...