Originally posted on lyranara.me:
Investigators at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute – whose previous research showed that cardiac stem cell therapy reduces scarring and regenerates healthy tissue after a heart attack in humans – have identified components of those stem cells responsible for the beneficial effects.
In a series of laboratory and lab animal studies, Heart Institute researchers found that exosomes, tiny membrane-enclosed “bubbles” involved in cell-to-cell communication, convey messages that reduce cell death, promote growth of new heart muscle cells and encourage the development of healthy blood vessels.
“Exosomes were first described in the mid-1980s, but we only now are beginning to appreciate their potential as therapeutic agents. We have found that exosomes and the cargo they contain are crucial mediators of stem cell-based heart regeneration, and we believe this might lead to an even more refined therapy using the ‘active ingredient’ instead of the entire stem cell,” said Eduardo Marbán, MD, PhD, director…
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