Engineered tissue geometry and Plakophilin-2 regulate electrophysiology of human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes

Author:

Simmons Daniel W.1ORCID,Malayath Ganesh1ORCID,Schuftan David R.1ORCID,Guo Jingxuan2ORCID,Oguntuyo Kasoorelope1ORCID,Ramahdita Ghiska2ORCID,Sun Yuwen1ORCID,Jordan Samuel D.3ORCID,Munsell Mary K.1ORCID,Kandalaft Brennan1ORCID,Pear Missy1,Rentschler Stacey L.3ORCID,Huebsch Nathaniel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis McKelvey School of Engineering 1 , St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Washington University in St. Louis McKelvey School of Engineering 2 , St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA

3. Department of Medicine, Cardiovascular Division, Washington University School of Medicine 3 , St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA

Abstract

Engineered heart tissues have been created to study cardiac biology and disease in a setting that more closely mimics in vivo heart muscle than 2D monolayer culture. Previously published studies suggest that geometrically anisotropic micro-environments are crucial for inducing “in vivo like” physiology from immature cardiomyocytes. We hypothesized that the degree of cardiomyocyte alignment and prestress within engineered tissues is regulated by tissue geometry and, subsequently, drives electrophysiological development. Thus, we studied the effects of tissue geometry on electrophysiology of micro-heart muscle arrays (μHM) engineered from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Elongated tissue geometries elicited cardiomyocyte shape and electrophysiology changes led to adaptations that yielded increased calcium intake during each contraction cycle. Strikingly, pharmacologic studies revealed that a threshold of prestress and/or cellular alignment is required for sodium channel function, whereas L-type calcium and rapidly rectifying potassium channels were largely insensitive to these changes. Concurrently, tissue elongation upregulated sodium channel (NaV1.5) and gap junction (Connexin 43, Cx43) protein expression. Based on these observations, we leveraged elongated μHM to study the impact of loss-of-function mutation in Plakophilin 2 (PKP2), a desmosome protein implicated in arrhythmogenic disease. Within μHM, PKP2 knockout cardiomyocytes had cellular morphology similar to what was observed in isogenic controls. However, PKP2−/− tissues exhibited lower conduction velocity and no functional sodium current. PKP2 knockout μHM exhibited geometrically linked upregulation of sodium channel but not Cx43, suggesting that post-translational mechanisms, including a lack of ion channel-gap junction communication, may underlie the lower conduction velocity observed in tissues harboring this genetic defect. Altogether, these observations demonstrate that simple, scalable micro-tissue systems can provide the physiologic stresses necessary to induce electrical remodeling of iPS-CM to enable studies on the electrophysiologic consequences of disease-associated genomic variants.

Funder

Center for Engineering MechanoBiology

American Heart Association

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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