Anti‐inflammatory peptides from cardiac progenitors ameliorate dysfunction after myocardial infarction

ML Liu, T Nagai, M Tokunaga, K Iwanaga… - Journal of the …, 2014 - Am Heart Assoc
ML Liu, T Nagai, M Tokunaga, K Iwanaga, K Matsuura, T Takahashi, M Kanda, N Kondo…
Journal of the American Heart Association, 2014Am Heart Assoc
Background Cardiac cell therapy has been proposed as one of the new strategies against
myocardial infarction. Although several reports showed improvement of the function of
ischemic heart, the effects of cell therapy vary among the studies and the mechanisms of the
beneficial effects are still unknown. Previously, we reported that clonal stem cell antigen‐1–
positive cardiac progenitor cells exerted a therapeutic effect when transplanted into the
ischemic heart. Our aims were to identify the cardiac progenitor‐specific paracrine factor and …
Background
Cardiac cell therapy has been proposed as one of the new strategies against myocardial infarction. Although several reports showed improvement of the function of ischemic heart, the effects of cell therapy vary among the studies and the mechanisms of the beneficial effects are still unknown. Previously, we reported that clonal stem cell antigen‐1–positive cardiac progenitor cells exerted a therapeutic effect when transplanted into the ischemic heart. Our aims were to identify the cardiac progenitor‐specific paracrine factor and to elucidate the mechanism of its beneficial effect.
Methods and Results
By using an antibody array, we found that soluble junctional adhesion molecule‐A (JAM‐A) was abundantly secreted from cardiac progenitor cells. Pretreatment of neutrophils with conditioned medium from cultured cardiac progenitor cells or soluble JAM‐A inhibited transendothelial migration and reduced motility of neutrophils. These inhibitory effects were attenuated by anti–JAM‐A neutralizing antibody. Injection of cardiac progenitor cells into infarct heart attenuated neutrophil infiltration and expression of inflammatory cytokines. Injection of soluble JAM‐A–expressing, but not of JAM‐A siRNA–expressing, cardiac progenitor cells into the infarct heart prevented cardiac remodeling and reduced fibrosis area.
Conclusions
Soluble JAM‐A secreted from cardiac progenitor cells reduces infiltration of neutrophils after myocardial infarction and ameliorates tissue damage through prevention of excess inflammation. Our finding may lead to a new therapy for cardiovascular disease by using the anti‐inflammatory effect of JAM‐A.
Am Heart Assoc