4.7 Article

Does Enhanced Structural Maturity of hiPSC-Cardiomyocytes Better for the Detection of Drug-Induced Cardiotoxicity?

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom13040676

Keywords

cell biology; cardio safety; hiPSC-CM; immature; CiPA; cardiac arrhythmia

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This study found that human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes treated to enhance structural maturity are superior to mature ventricular cardiomyocytes in detecting drug-induced changes. The electrophysiological and contractility measurements showed similar results in two different experimental settings, but with slight differences in contraction amplitude, which may be explained by differences in cell-to-matrix adhesion. These findings suggest that both types of 2D culture containing structural matured hiPSC-CMs are equally effective in detecting drug-induced electrophysiological effects in functional safety studies.
Human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) are currently used following the Comprehensive in vitro Proarrhythmic Assay (CiPA) initiative and subsequent recommendations in the International Council for Harmonization (ICH) guidelines S7B and E14 Q&A, to detect drug-induced cardiotoxicity. Monocultures of hiPSC-CMs are immature compared to adult ventricular cardiomyocytes and might lack the native heterogeneous nature. We investigated whether hiPSC-CMs, treated to enhance structural maturity, are superior in detecting drug-induced changes in electrophysiology and contraction. This was achieved by comparing hiPSC-CMs cultured in 2D monolayers on the current standard (fibronectin matrix, FM), to monolayers on a coating known to promote structural maturity (CELLvo (TM) Matrix Plus, MM). Functional assessment of electrophysiology and contractility was made using a high-throughput screening approach involving the use of both voltage-sensitive fluorescent dyes for electrophysiology and video technology for contractility. Using 11 reference drugs, the response of the monolayer of hiPSC-CMs was comparable in the two experimental settings (FM and MM). The data showed no functionally relevant differences in electrophysiology between hiPSC-CMs in standard FM and MM, while contractility read-outs indicated an altered amplitude of contraction but not changes in time course. RNA profiling for cardiac proteins shows similarity of the RNA expression across the two forms of 2D culture, suggesting that cell-to-matrix adhesion differences may explain account for differences in contraction amplitude. The results support the view that hiPSC-CMs in both 2D monolayer FM and MM that promote structural maturity are equally effective in detecting drug-induced electrophysiological effects in functional safety studies.

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