New stem cell medium creates contracting canine heart muscle cells
Researchers have created a special culture medium that allows dog stem cells to stably differentiate into functional heart muscle cells complete with contractions
2025-11-21
(Press-News.org) In research, induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells are derived from skin, urine, or blood samples and developed into other cells, like heart tissue, that researchers want to study. Because of the similarities between certain dog and human diseases, canine iPS cells have potential uses in regenerative medicine and drug discovery.
Research on iPS cells is challenging because the cells are extremely sensitive to culture conditions. Before they are developed into other cells, iPS cells are in an undifferentiated state. At this stage, the cells are grown in a culture medium that provides the essential nutrients, growth factors, and signaling molecules that they require. However, optimizing these components is tricky, leading many cells to fail to maintain their pluripotency (ability to become any cell type) or differentiate in undesirable ways. As a result, the medium often constrains what researchers can achieve.
An international team led by Professor Shingo Hatoya of the Graduate School of Veterinary Science at Osaka Metropolitan University has developed a new culture medium, ‘AR medium,’ that transforms canine iPS cells into cardiomyocyte cells—the muscle cells that contract the heart.
Using AR medium, the researchers created the specific conditions required for proliferation in their undifferentiated state. They then established culture conditions suitable for the undifferentiated iPS cells to undergo differentiation into cardiac tissue. The result was cells that expressed genes and proteins that are only found in heart muscle cells.
The researchers also observed rhythmic contractions similar to a beating heart; the gold standard of whether the cells are functionally heart cells.
Far from simply being similar to heart muscle cells, these cells were functionally identical to cardiomyocytes. This would allow them to be used to test how new compounds affect heart rhythm, contractility, and safety before clinical trials and evaluate drug efficacy and safety.
“Our research contributes to the development of treatments and could play an important role in preclinical studies for genetic abnormalities common to both humans and dogs that involve similar genetic pathways, such as dilated cardiomyopathy,” Hatoya said. “Research using canine stem cells is expected to accelerate the development of regenerative medicine and genetic disease treatments for humans.”
The AR medium also potentially allows researchers to differentiate the iPS cells into cell types other than cardiomyocytes. Professor Hatoya is excited about the possibilities: “Using the medium would expand the potential use of iPS cells in regenerative medicine and allow researchers to investigate molecules to treat difficult-to-treat diseases including everything from heart and liver disease to neurological disorders.”
The study was published in Stem Cell Reports.
###
About OMU
Established in Osaka as one of the largest public universities in Japan, Osaka Metropolitan University is committed to shaping the future of society through the “Convergence of Knowledge” and the promotion of world-class research. For more research news, visit https://www.omu.ac.jp/en/ and follow us on social media: X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-11-21
As wearable electronics migrate toward real-time health monitoring and seamless human–machine interfaces, conventional hydrogels freeze, dry out and fracture under daily conditions. Now, a multidisciplinary team led by Prof. Sang-Jae Kim (Jeju National University) has unveiled a CoN-CNT/PVA/GLE organogel sensor that marries sub-zero toughness with AI-grade pattern recognition. The device delivers 5.75 kPa-1 sensitivity across 0–20 kPa, heals in 0.24 s, and classifies handwritten English letters at 98 % accuracy—offering a robust, bio-compatible platform for next-generation soft robotics ...
2025-11-21
As fertilizer demand rises and nitrate pollution spreads, turning waste NO₃⁻ into green NH₃ has become urgent. Now, researchers from Guizhou University, Hunan Agricultural University and Shanghai University, led by Professor Jili Yuan, Professor Wei Li and Dr Liang Wang, report a selective-etching route to RuM (M = Fe, Co, Ni, Cu) nanoalloys that deliver 100 % Faradaic efficiency for neutral ammonia electro-synthesis at only −0.1 V vs RHE—outperforming most catalysts reported to date.
Why RuM Nanoalloys Matter
• Energy Efficiency: Alloying ...
2025-11-21
As electric vehicles, satellites and wearable electronics push into sub-zero environments, conventional lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) lose most of their energy and power, while lithium plating threatens safety. Now, researchers from Chang’an University and Queensland University of Technology, led by Professor Limin Geng, Professor Weijia Meng and Dr Jiaye Ye, have published a forward-looking review on low-temperature (LT) electrolytes that keep LIBs charging and discharging down to −80 °C. This work offers a systematic ...
2025-11-21
As artificial-intelligence workloads explode, the energy cost and latency of shuttling data between discrete sensors, memory and processors have become critical bottlenecks. Now, researchers from the School of Integrated Circuits at Shandong University, led by Professor Jialin Meng and Professor Tianyu Wang, have published a forward-looking review on two-dimensional MXene materials that act simultaneously as ultra-sensitive sensors and neuromorphic synapses. This work charts a direct route toward self-powered, edge-intelligent systems that see, feel ...
2025-11-21
UC Davis researchers are leading a $5.5 million study to better understand how children with Down syndrome develop expressive communication — the skills used to share what we want, think or feel.
Angela John Thurman, a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the UC Davis MIND Institute, is leading the research. The five-year project is funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
“Most children with Down syndrome have delays in developing expressive communication,” ...
2025-11-21
Native Australian animals range from high-hopping kangaroos to fast-running emus – but clever little bettongs also have a special ability to find and eat the food they love.
Flinders University researchers have discovered the secrets behind a superpower of these tiny relatives of kangaroos which allows them to crack open seeds that would break the jaws of most animals. They hope the research will help conservation efforts, including finding suitable locations to reintroduce populations severely impacted by predation and habitat loss.
The new study, published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, reveals ...
2025-11-21
The road to glory in the Australian Football League (AFL) is highly competitive, with as few as 0.01% of more than 640,000 young footballers and athletes from around Australia selected in the annual draft process.
With so many young players pinning their hopes on selection, sport experts from Flinders University have surveyed more than 400 young male Australian footballers (16-18 years old) to evaluate the psychological impact on their mental health and wellbeing during a draft selection year.
In the midst of adolescence and crucial stages of life, striving to compete at these levels raises concerns for the effects on young male players, says Associate Professor ...
2025-11-21
A significant proportion of under 5s in Nigeria may be being exposed to skin lightning products, if the results of a semi-urban community survey are indicative, suggests research published in the open access journal BMJ Open.
Most (80%) of the respondents’ children exposed to skin bleaching products were under 2 years old, and despite good knowledge of the health risks of the practice, these were trumped by aesthetic preferences for lighter skin tones, the survey responses show.
The cosmetic use of skin lightening products has become increasingly common globally, with very high ...
2025-11-21
A new study has found African lions produce not one, but two distinct types of roars - a discovery set to transform wildlife monitoring and conservation efforts.
Researchers at the University of Exeter have identified a previously unclassified “intermediary roar” alongside the famous full-throated roar. The study, published in Ecology and Evolution, used artificial intelligence to automatically differentiate between lion roars for the first time. This new approach had a 95.4 per cent accuracy and significantly reduced human bias to improve the identification of individual lions.
Lead author Jonathan Growcott from the University of Exeter said: ...
2025-11-20
A new Australian study has smashed the myth that generative AI systems such as ChatGPT could soon replace society’s most creative playwrights, authors, songwriters, artists and scriptwriters.
The existing large language models (LLMs) have a built-in mathematical ceiling on their creative capacity, meaning they will never rival the originality or ingenuity of the most creative individuals.
That’s the finding from creativity expert David Cropley, a Professor of Engineering Innovation at the University of South Australia, whose study on the mathematical limits of generative AI has been published in the Journal ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] New stem cell medium creates contracting canine heart muscle cells
Researchers have created a special culture medium that allows dog stem cells to stably differentiate into functional heart muscle cells complete with contractions