Bmi-1 high-expressing cells enrich cardiac stem/progenitor cells and respond to heart injury

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Abstract

Bmi-1 gene is well recognized as an oncogene, but has been recently demonstrated to play a role in the self-renewal of tissue-specific stem cells. By using Bmi-1 GFP/+ mice, we investigated the role of Bmi-1 in cardiac stem/progenitor cells and myocardial repair. RT-PCR and flow cytometry analysis indicated that the expression of Bmi-1 was significantly higher in cardiac side population than the main population from CD45 − Ter119 − CD31 − heart cells. More Sca-1 + cardiac stem/progenitor cells were found in Bmi-1 GFP hi subpopulation, and these Bmi-1 GFP hi heart cells showed the potential of differentiation into SMM + smooth muscle-like cells and TnT + cardiomyocyte-like cells in vitro. The silencing of Bmi-1 significantly inhibited the proliferation and differentiation of heart cells. Otherwise, myocardial infarction induced a significantly increase (2.7-folds) of Bmi-1 GFP hi population, mainly within the infarction and border zones. These preliminary data suggest that Bmi-1 hi heart cells are enriched in cardiac stem/progenitor cells and may play a role in myocardial repair.

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Song, Y., Zhao, M., Xie, Y., Zhu, T., Liang, W., Sun, B., … Xie, Y. (2019). Bmi-1 high-expressing cells enrich cardiac stem/progenitor cells and respond to heart injury. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 23(1), 104–111. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.13889

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