Rationale: Impaired maturation of human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) currently limits their use in experimental research and further optimization is required to unlock their full potential.
Objective: To push hiPSC-CMs towards maturation, we recapitulated the intrinsic cardiac properties by electro-mechanical stimulation and explored how these mimetic biophysical cues interplay and influence the cell behaviour.
Methods and results: We introduced a novel device capable of applying synchronized electrical and mechanical stimuli to hiPSC-CM monolayers cultured on a PDMS membrane and evaluated effects of conditioning on cardiomyocyte structure and function. Human iPSC-CMs retained their cardiac phenotype and displayed adaptive structural responses to electrical (E), mechanical (M) and combined electro-mechanical (EM) stimuli, including enhanced membrane N-cadherin signal, stress-fiber formation and sarcomeric length shortening, most prominent under the EM stimulation. On the functional level, EM conditioning significantly reduced the transmembrane calcium current, resulting in a shift towards triangulation of intracellular calcium transients. In contrast, E and M stimulation applied independently increased the proportion of cells with L-Type calcium currents. In addition, calcium transients measured in the M-conditioned samples advanced to a more rectangular shape.
Conclusion: The new methodology is a simple and elegant technique to systematically investigate and manipulate cardiomyocyte remodelling for translational applications. In the present study, we adjusted critical parameters to optimize a regimen for hiPSC-CM transformation. In the future, this technology will open up new avenues for electro-mechanical stimulation by allowing temporal and spatial control of stimuli which can be easily scaled up in complexity for cardiac development and disease modelling.
Keywords: Ca(2+) handling; Electro-mechanical stimulation; Electrophysiology; Maturation; Stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes.
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