In Vitro Mechanical Stimulation to Reproduce the Pathological Hallmarks of Human Cardiac Fibrosis on a Beating Chip and Predict The Efficacy of Drugs and Advanced Therapies

Author:

Visone Roberta12ORCID,Paoletti Camilla34ORCID,Cordiale Alessandro2,Nicoletti Letizia34ORCID,Divieto Carla5ORCID,Rasponi Marco24ORCID,Chiono Valeria34ORCID,Occhetta Paola12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. BiomimX Srl Milan 20157 Italy

2. Department of Electronics Informatics and Bioengineering Politecnico di Milano Milan 20133 Italy

3. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Politecnico di Torino Turin 10129 Italy

4. Centro 3R (Interuniversity Center for the Promotion of 3Rs Principles in Teaching and Research) Pisa 56122 Italy

5. Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica Division of Advanced Materials and Life Sciences Turin 10135 Italy

Abstract

AbstractCardiac fibrosis is one of the main causes of heart failure, significantly contributing to mortality. The discovery and development of effective therapies able to heal fibrotic pathological symptoms thus remain of paramount importance. Micro‐physiological systems (MPS) are recently introduced as promising platforms able to accelerate this finding. Here a 3D in vitro model of human cardiac fibrosis, named uScar, is developed by imposing a cyclic mechanical stimulation to human atrial cardiac fibroblasts (AHCFs) cultured in a 3D beating heart‐on‐chip and exploited to screen drugs and advanced therapeutics. The sole provision of a cyclic 10% uniaxial strain at 1 Hz to the microtissues is sufficient to trigger fibrotic traits, inducing a consistent fibroblast‐to‐myofibroblast transition and an enhanced expression and production of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Standard of care anti‐fibrotic drugs (i.e., Pirfenidone and Tranilast) are confirmed to be efficient in preventing the onset of fibrotic traits in uScar. Conversely, the mechanical stimulation applied to the microtissues limit the ability of a miRNA therapy to directly reprogram fibroblasts into cardiomyocytes (CMs), despite its proved efficacy in 2D models. Such results demonstrate the importance of incorporating in vivo‐like stimulations to generate more representative 3D in vitro models able to predict the efficacy of therapies in patients.

Funder

Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca

European Research Council

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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