Defined engineered human myocardium with advanced maturation for applications in heart failure modeling and repair

M Tiburcy, JE Hudson, P Balfanz, S Schlick, T Meyer… - Circulation, 2017 - Am Heart Assoc
M Tiburcy, JE Hudson, P Balfanz, S Schlick, T Meyer, ML Chang Liao, E Levent, F Raad…
Circulation, 2017Am Heart Assoc
Background: Advancing structural and functional maturation of stem cell–derived
cardiomyocytes remains a key challenge for applications in disease modeling, drug
screening, and heart repair. Here, we sought to advance cardiomyocyte maturation in
engineered human myocardium (EHM) toward an adult phenotype under defined
conditions. Methods: We systematically investigated cell composition, matrix, and media
conditions to generate EHM from embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cell–derived …
Background
Advancing structural and functional maturation of stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes remains a key challenge for applications in disease modeling, drug screening, and heart repair. Here, we sought to advance cardiomyocyte maturation in engineered human myocardium (EHM) toward an adult phenotype under defined conditions.
Methods
We systematically investigated cell composition, matrix, and media conditions to generate EHM from embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes and fibroblasts with organotypic functionality under serum-free conditions. We used morphological, functional, and transcriptome analyses to benchmark maturation of EHM.
Results
EHM demonstrated important structural and functional properties of postnatal myocardium, including: (1) rod-shaped cardiomyocytes with M bands assembled as a functional syncytium; (2) systolic twitch forces at a similar level as observed in bona fide postnatal myocardium; (3) a positive force-frequency response; (4) inotropic responses to β-adrenergic stimulation mediated via canonical β1- and β2-adrenoceptor signaling pathways; and (5) evidence for advanced molecular maturation by transcriptome profiling. EHM responded to chronic catecholamine toxicity with contractile dysfunction, cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, cardiomyocyte death, and N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide release; all are classical hallmarks of heart failure. In addition, we demonstrate the scalability of EHM according to anticipated clinical demands for cardiac repair.
Conclusions
We provide proof-of-concept for a universally applicable technology for the engineering of macroscale human myocardium for disease modeling and heart repair from embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes under defined, serum-free conditions.
Am Heart Assoc