Extracellular vesicles (EVs) and exosomes are nano-sized, membrane-bound vesicles shed by most eukaryotic cells studied to date. EVs play key signaling roles in cellular development, cancer metastasis, immune modulation and tissue regeneration...
Read More »Personalized therapy for human heart diseases with the exosomes generated from iPSC derived cardiomyocytes
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in modern society. The adult heart innately lacks the capacity to repair and regenerate the damaged myocardium from ischemic injury. Limited understanding of cardiac tissue repair process hampers the development of ...
Read More »microRNA passenger strand-enriched exosomes mediate cardiomyocyte hypertrophy
In response to stress, the heart undergoes extensive cardiac remodeling that results in cardiac fibrosis and pathological growth of cardiomyocytes (hypertrophy), which contribute to heart failure. Alterations in microRNA (miRNA) levels are associated with dysfunctional gene expression profiles associated with ...
Read More »Protecting the Heart at a Distance: Exosomes for nano-sized Cardioprotection
Preconditioning is widely known to protect cardiomyocytes from reperfusion-induced cell death by activation of several pro-survival transductional pathways. The fact that preconditioning can be achieved remotely (Remote Ischaemic Preconditioning, RIPC) means that humoral factors are released from ischaemic limbs into ...
Read More »The role of exosomes in myocardial remodeling
Exosomes are nanovesicles released from cells through exocytosis and are known to be mediators of proximal as well as distant cell-to-cell signaling. They are surrounded by a classical bilayered membrane with an exceptionally high cholesterol/phospholipid ratio. Exosomes were first described ...
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