Gregory A Quaife-Ryan, Choon Boon Sim, Enzo R Porrello, James E Hudson
In contrast to adults, recent evidence suggests that neonatal mice are able to regenerate following cardiac injury. This regenerative capacity is reliant on robust induction of cardiomyocyte proliferation, which is required for faithful regeneration of the heart following injury. However, cardiac regenerative potential is lost as cardiomyocytes mature and permanently withdraw from the cell cycle shortly after birth. Recently, a handful of factors responsible for the regenerative disparity between the adult and neonatal heart have been identified, but the proliferative response of adult cardiomyocytes following modulation of these factors rarely reaches neonatal levels...
October 2016: Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology