Affiliation:
1. National Heart & Lung Institute Imperial College London London UK
2. Department of Physiology and Biophysics University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago Illinois USA
3. Laboratoire “Physiologie Et Médecine Expérimentale du Coeur Et Des Muscles,” PhymedexpINSERM, CNRS Montpellier University, CHU Arnaud de Villeneuve Montpellier France
Abstract
AbstractMechanical load is one of the main determinants of cardiac structure and function. Mechanical load is studied in vitro using cardiac preparations together with loading protocols (e.g., auxotonic, isometric). However, such studies are often limited by reductionist models and poorly simulated mechanical load profiles. This hinders the physiological relevance of findings. Living myocardial slices have been used to study load in vitro. Living myocardial slices (LMS) are 300‐μm‐thick intact organotypic preparations obtained from explanted animal or human hearts. They have preserved cellular populations and the functional, structural, metabolic and molecular profile of the tissue from which they are prepared. Using a three‐element Windkessel (3EWK) model we previously showed that LMSs can be cultured while performing cardiac work loops with different preload and afterload. Under such conditions, LMSs remodel as a function of the mechanical load applied to them (physiological load, pressure or volume overload). These studies were conducted in commercially available length actuators that had to be extensively modified for culture experiments. In this paper, we demonstrate the design, development and validation of a novel device, MyoLoop. MyoLoop is a bioreactor that can pace, thermoregulate, acquire and process data, and chronically load LMSs and other cardiac tissues in vitro. In MyoLoop, load is parametrised using a 3EWK model, which can be used to recreate physiological and pathological work loops and the remodelling response to these. We believe MyoLoop is the next frontier in basic cardiovascular research enabling reductionist but physiologically relevant in vitro mechanical studies.New Findings
What is the central question of this study?Can cardiac tissues be cultured under conditions that do not simulate the mechanical load the heart is exposed to in vivo?
What is the main finding and its importance?A culture bioreactor was developed that can keep living heart tissue alive in vitro under continuous electromechanical stimulation. The device, MyoLoop, simulates the cardiac cycle on a beating slice during culture, recreating the in vivo workload of the heart in vitro. MyoLoop is a novel translational platform for cardiac studies.
Subject
Physiology,Physiology (medical),Nutrition and Dietetics,Physiology,Physiology (medical),Nutrition and Dietetics
Cited by
2 articles.
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