4.7 Article

OptoGap is an optogenetics-enabled assay for quantification of cell-cell coupling in multicellular cardiac tissue

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88573-1

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资金

  1. NIH [R01 HL111649, R01 HL144157-01A1, R01HL126802]
  2. Leducq Foundation
  3. NSF-Biophotonics Grants [1623068, 1705645, 1827535]
  4. Directorate For Engineering
  5. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [1623068] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  7. Directorate For Engineering [1705645] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Intercellular electrical coupling plays a crucial role in cellular communication, and OptoGap is a new contactless method for quantifying cell-cell coupling through selective illumination of non-excitable cells and optical sensing of excitable cell responses. Experimental validation in a two-dimensional setting shows the potential applicability of OptoGap to the integration of fibroblasts and non-transformed cardiomyocytes, while computational analysis confirms its sensitivity to cell-scale excitability.
Intercellular electrical coupling is an essential means of communication between cells. It is important to obtain quantitative knowledge of such coupling between cardiomyocytes and non-excitable cells when, for example, pathological electrical coupling between myofibroblasts and cardiomyocytes yields increased arrhythmia risk or during the integration of donor (e.g., cardiac progenitor) cells with native cardiomyocytes in cell-therapy approaches. Currently, there is no direct method for assessing heterocellular coupling within multicellular tissue. Here we demonstrate experimentally and computationally a new contactless assay for electrical coupling, OptoGap, based on selective illumination of inexcitable cells that express optogenetic actuators and optical sensing of the response of coupled excitable cells (e.g., cardiomyocytes) that are light-insensitive. Cell-cell coupling is quantified by the energy required to elicit an action potential via junctional current from the light-stimulated cell(s). The proposed technique is experimentally validated against the standard indirect approach, GapFRAP, using light-sensitive cardiac fibroblasts and non-transformed cardiomyocytes in a two-dimensional setting. Its potential applicability to the complex three-dimensional setting of the native heart is corroborated by computational modelling and proper calibration. Lastly, the sensitivity of OptoGap to intrinsic cell-scale excitability is robustly characterized via computational analysis.

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