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Press Release Sparking Hearts: SPARC Promotes Heart Muscle Formation from Stem Cells The protein SPARC plays a key role in the development of heart muscle in the embryo. An Austrian Science Fund (FWF) project has discovered this previously unknown role of SPARC. The protein has a significant effect on the activity of the genes that are responsible for the emergence of heart cells from initially undifferentiated embryonic stem cells. The results of this project, carried out at the Medical University of Vienna, may enable heart cells to be grown for use in cell therapy for heart attack patients. There are no easy options when the heart begins running out of steam. A transplant or the implantation of an artificial heart is risky. However the use of new tissue to regenerate damaged heart muscle may well present a better alternative in future. The production of heart muscle cells has taken a big step forward as a result of research at the Medical University of Vienna, Department of Medical Biochemistry by a team led by Prof. Georg Weitzer of the Max Perutz Laboratories. Sparking Development Using "embryoid bodies" as practical laboratory model, Prof. Weitzer succeeded in analysing the complex regulation mechanisms involved in the differentiation of stem cells into heart cells. These aggregates of embryonic stem cells can be produced from existing cultures and offer a convenient model for the very early development of an embryo. Heart cells whose rhythmic beating can clearly be seen through a microscope actually develop from initially undifferentiated cells, along with other types of cells, in these aggregates. Beat Generation The elegant embryoid bodies test system has already enabled Prof. Weitzer to identify another protein that plays an important part in the development of heart muscle cells. The results are currently undergoing a peer review process and will be published in 2006. These outcomes of the FWF project could mean that it will be possible to use heart muscle cells to strengthen patients' diseased or weak hearts. This would limit risky and expensive transplantations and the use of artificial hearts to a smaller number of particularly critical cases. Scientific Contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing & Distribution
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