There are 64,000 living species of vertebrates on our planet and all of them have a heart. Comparative analyses devoted to understanding the regenerative potential of the myocardium have been performed in a dozen vertebrate species with the aim of developing regenerative therapies for human heart disease. Based on this relatively small selection of animal models, important insights into the evolutionary conservation of regenerative mechanisms have been gained. In this review, we survey cardiac regeneration studies in diverse species to provide an evolutionary context for the lack of regenerative capacity in the adult mammalian heart. Our analyses highlight the importance of cardiac adaptations that have occurred over hundreds of millions of...
Lower vertebrates, such as newt and zebrafish, retain a robust cardiac regenerative capacity followi...
The mammalian heart cannot regenerate substantial cardiac injuries, while certain non-mammalian vert...
The epidemic of heart disease, the leading cause of death worldwide, is made worse by the fact that ...
There are 64,000 living species of vertebrates on our planet and all of them have a heart. Comparati...
Cardiac regeneration is an ancestral trait in vertebrates that is lost both as more recent vertebrat...
The adult mammalian heart has an extremely limited capacity for regeneration. As a consequence, isch...
Fish model organisms such a Danio rerio have the ability to regenerate heart muscle during its whole...
Heart failure is a major cause of death worldwide owing to the inability of the adult human heart to...
Different vertebrate species have different cardiac regeneration rates: high in teleost fish, modera...
Adult humans fail to regenerate their hearts following injury, and this failure to regenerate myocar...
AbstractAdult mammals undergo minimal regeneration following cardiac injury, which severely compromi...
AbstractEarly cardiac development involves the formation of a heart tube, looping of the tube and fo...
AbstractThe adult mammalian heart was once believed to be a post-mitotic organ without any capacity ...
The adult mammalian heart was once believed to be a post-mitotic organ without any capacity for rege...
The mechanisms of the evolution and development of the heart in metazoans are highlighted, starting ...
Lower vertebrates, such as newt and zebrafish, retain a robust cardiac regenerative capacity followi...
The mammalian heart cannot regenerate substantial cardiac injuries, while certain non-mammalian vert...
The epidemic of heart disease, the leading cause of death worldwide, is made worse by the fact that ...
There are 64,000 living species of vertebrates on our planet and all of them have a heart. Comparati...
Cardiac regeneration is an ancestral trait in vertebrates that is lost both as more recent vertebrat...
The adult mammalian heart has an extremely limited capacity for regeneration. As a consequence, isch...
Fish model organisms such a Danio rerio have the ability to regenerate heart muscle during its whole...
Heart failure is a major cause of death worldwide owing to the inability of the adult human heart to...
Different vertebrate species have different cardiac regeneration rates: high in teleost fish, modera...
Adult humans fail to regenerate their hearts following injury, and this failure to regenerate myocar...
AbstractAdult mammals undergo minimal regeneration following cardiac injury, which severely compromi...
AbstractEarly cardiac development involves the formation of a heart tube, looping of the tube and fo...
AbstractThe adult mammalian heart was once believed to be a post-mitotic organ without any capacity ...
The adult mammalian heart was once believed to be a post-mitotic organ without any capacity for rege...
The mechanisms of the evolution and development of the heart in metazoans are highlighted, starting ...
Lower vertebrates, such as newt and zebrafish, retain a robust cardiac regenerative capacity followi...
The mammalian heart cannot regenerate substantial cardiac injuries, while certain non-mammalian vert...
The epidemic of heart disease, the leading cause of death worldwide, is made worse by the fact that ...