Spheroids of cardiomyocytes derived from human-induced pluripotent stem cells improve recovery from myocardial injury in mice

S Mattapally, W Zhu, VG Fast, L Gao… - American Journal …, 2018 - journals.physiology.org
S Mattapally, W Zhu, VG Fast, L Gao, C Worley, R Kannappan, AV Borovjagin, J Zhang
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2018journals.physiology.org
The microenvironment of native heart tissue may be better replicated when cardiomyocytes
are cultured in three-dimensional clusters (ie, spheroids) than in monolayers or as individual
cells. Thus, we differentiated human cardiac lineage-induced pluripotent stem cells in
cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) and allowed them to form spheroids and spheroid fusions that
were characterized in vitro and evaluated in mice after experimentally induced myocardial
infarction (MI). Synchronized contractions were observed within 24 h of spheroid formation …
The microenvironment of native heart tissue may be better replicated when cardiomyocytes are cultured in three-dimensional clusters (i.e., spheroids) than in monolayers or as individual cells. Thus, we differentiated human cardiac lineage-induced pluripotent stem cells in cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) and allowed them to form spheroids and spheroid fusions that were characterized in vitro and evaluated in mice after experimentally induced myocardial infarction (MI). Synchronized contractions were observed within 24 h of spheroid formation, and optical mapping experiments confirmed the presence of both Ca2+ transients and propagating action potentials. In spheroid fusions, the intraspheroid conduction velocity was 7.0 ± 3.8 cm/s on days 12 after formation, whereas the conduction velocity between spheroids increased significantly (P = 0.003) from 0.8 ± 1.1 cm/s on days 12 to 3.3 ± 1.4 cm/s on day 7. For the murine MI model, five-spheroid fusions (200,000 hiPSC-CMs/spheroid) were embedded in a fibrin patch and the patch was transplanted over the site of infarction. Later (4 wk), echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular ejection fraction and fractional shortening were significantly greater in patch-treated animals than in animals that recovered without the patch, and the engraftment rate was 25.6% or 30% when evaluated histologically or via bioluminescence imaging, respectively. The exosomes released from the spheroid patch seemed to increase cardiac function. In conclusion, our results established the feasibility of using hiPSC-CM spheroids and spheroid fusions for cardiac tissue engineering, and, when fibrin patches containing hiPSC-CM spheroid fusions were evaluated in a murine MI model, the engraftment rate was much higher than the rates we have achieved via the direct intramyocardial injection.
NEW & NOTEWORTHY Spheroids fuse in culture to produce structures with uniformly distributed cells. Furthermore, human cardiac lineage-induced pluripotent stem cells in cardiomyocytes in adjacent fused spheroids became electromechanically coupled as the fusions matured in vitro, and when the spheroids were combined with a biological matrix and administered as a patch over the infarcted region of mouse hearts, the engraftment rate exceeded 25%, and the treatment was associated with significant improvements in cardiac function via a paracrine mechanism, where exosomes released from the spheroid patch.
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