4.8 Article

Nanowires and Electrical Stimulation Synergistically Improve Functions of hiPSC Cardiac Spheroids

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages 4670-4678

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b02093

Keywords

Silicon nanowires; electrical stimulation; cardiac spheroids; human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [8P20 GM103444, U54 GM104941]
  2. Clemson University
  3. National Science Foundation [NSF - EPS-0903795]
  4. NIH Cardiovascular Training Grant [T32 HL007260]
  5. US Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Review [I01 BX002327]
  6. NIH-NIGMS [P30 GM103342]

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The advancement of human induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived cardiomyocyte (hiPSC-CM) technology has shown promising potential to provide a patient-specific, regenerative cell therapy strategy to treat cardiovascular disease. Despite the progress, the unspecific, underdeveloped phenotype of hiPSC-CMs has shown arrhythmogenic risk and limited functional improvements after transplantation. To address this, tissue engineering strategies have utilized both exogenous and endogenous stimuli to accelerate the development of hiPSC-CMs. Exogenous electrical stimulation provides a biomimetic pacemaker-like stimuli that has been shown to advance the electrical properties of tissue engineered cardiac constructs. Recently, we demonstrated that the incorporation of electrically conductive silicon nanowires to hiPSC cardiac spheroids led to advanced structural and functional development of hiPSC-CMs by improving the endogenous electrical microenvironment. Here, we reasoned that the enhanced endogenous electrical microenvironment of nanowired hiPSC cardiac spheroids would synergize with exogenous electrical stimulation to further advance the functional development of nanowired hiPSC cardiac spheroids. For the first time, we report that the combination of nanowires and electrical stimulation enhanced cell cell junction formation, improved development of contractile machinery, and led to a significant decrease in the spontaneous beat rate of hiPSC cardiac spheroids. The advancements made here address critical challenges for the use of hiPSC-CMs in cardiac developmental and translational research and provide an advanced cell delivery vehicle for the next generation of cardiac repair.

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