- Broughton, Kathleen M;
- Khieu, Tiffany;
- Nguyen, Nicky;
- Rosa, Michael;
- Mohsin, Sadia;
- Quijada, Pearl;
- Wang, Bingyan J;
- Echeagaray, Oscar H;
- Kubli, Dieter A;
- Kim, Taeyong;
- Firouzi, Fareheh;
- Monsanto, Megan M;
- Gude, Natalie A;
- Adamson, Robert M;
- Dembitsky, Walter P;
- Davis, Michael E;
- Sussman, Mark A
Cardiomyocyte ploidy has been described but remains obscure in cardiac interstitial cells. Ploidy of c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells was assessed using confocal, karyotypic, and flow cytometric technique. Notable differences were found between rodent (rat, mouse) c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells possessing mononuclear tetraploid (4n) content, compared to large mammals (human, swine) with mononuclear diploid (2n) content. In-situ analysis, confirmed with fresh isolates, revealed diploid content in human c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells and a mixture of diploid and tetraploid content in mouse. Downregulation of the p53 signaling pathway provides evidence why rodent, but not human, c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells escape replicative senescence. Single cell transcriptional profiling reveals distinctions between diploid versus tetraploid populations in mouse c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells, alluding to functional divergences. Collectively, these data reveal notable species-specific biological differences in c-kit+ cardiac interstitial cells, which could account for challenges in extrapolation of myocardial from preclinical studies to clinical trials.