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Tissue engineering strategies for cardiovascular regeneration Sara S. Nunes de Vasconcelos, Ph.D. Scientist Div. of Experimental Therapeutics Toronto General Research Institute University Health Network Overview Cardiovascular diseases Leading cause of death globally (WHO) Myocardial infarction Myocardial infarction (MI) – death of cardiomyocytes and loss of function Adult cardiomyocytes – low proliferation Cardiac tissue regeneration: Ischemia Re-establish the vasculature Replace lost cardiomyocytes Human stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes – high potential for application in regenerative medicine Stem cells: hES and iPS cells Human ES and iPSC - unlimited self renewal - differentiate into any cell type iPSC ESC Cell Stem Cell , Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages 16-28 (DOI:10.1016/j.stem.2011.12.013) hESC and hiPSC cardiomyocyte differentiation Concentration gradients hPSC growth Feeder depletion aggregation Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 BMP4 BMP4 bFGF Act.A VEGF DKK1 VEGF DKK1 (?) bFGF d0 d1 d4 Hypoxia d0-d12 d8 Human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes Cardiomyocyte = 69% (green) Control = 2.5%(black) Yang et al, Circ. Res. 2014. hESC and hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes • Characteristics Sarcomere structure - absence of H zones, I bands and M lines High proliferation rates: 17%, EBs day 37; 10%, EBs day 21-35; Expression of the “fetal gene program” (ANF, BNP and α-MHC). Immature electrophysiological properties Low force of contraction – 0.1-11.8±4.5mN/mm2 (adult 50mN/mm2) Immature action potentials and Ca2+ handling properties - immature sarcoplasmic reticulum Automaticity Maturation platform • Extracellular matrix cues (tension, col I, laminin) • 3D tissues • Self assemble • Soluble factors (VEGF, bFGF) • Electrical stimulation (pacing) • Variable size Cardiac biowire platform Adapted from Nature Reviews, 2006. Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Cardiac biowires Optical mapping Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Electrical field stimulation regimen Low frequency ramp up regimen (3Hz) Day 0 Pre-culture Cell seeding Day 7 E. Stimulation (3-4V/cm) 1Hz 1.83 2.66 3 3 3 Day 14 3Hz Analysis Stimulation chamber Biowire High frequency ramp up regimen (6Hz) Day 0 Pre-culture Day 7 E. Stimulation (3-4V/cm) Day 14 Electrode Cell seeding 1Hz 1.83 2.66 3.49 4.82 5.15 6Hz Analysis Controls: Non-stimulated biowires, starting population EBd20 and age matched EBs (EBd34) Cardiomyocytes display more mature sarcomere structure Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Electrical pacing improves cardiomyocyte impulse propagation Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Relative gene expression (normalized to housekeeping) Electrical pacing improves cardiomyocyte electrophysiology 20 KCNJ2/Kir2.1 15 10 5 0 EBd20 EBd34 CTRL 3 Hz 6 Hz Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Electrical pacing improves calcium handling properties Non-stimulated control (n=18) 3Hz (n=11) 6Hz (n=19) p value (control vs. 6Hz) Amplitude (F/F0) 2.50 ± 0.13 2.64 ± 0.18 2.93 ± 0.12* 0.017 Rising slope (F/F0/s) 5.29 ± 0.55 5.55 ± 0.66 7.36 ± 0.64* 0.025 Time to peak (s) 0.511 ± 0.046 0.496 ± 0.044 0.403 ± 0.037* 0.049 τ-decay (s) 0.591 ± 0.058 0.521 ± 0.057 0.419 ± 0.043* 0.022 Time to base (s) 1.461 ± 0.137 1.310 ± 0.147 1.142 ± 0.091* 0.035 *denotes statistical significance vs. non-stimulated control (mean ± SEM). Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Calcium handling: SR protein expression Unpublished data. Relative gene expression (normalized to housekeeping) Culture in biowire downregulates fetal gene program 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 NPPB/BNP 1.2 NPPA/ANF 1.2 1 1.0 0.8 0.8 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.0 0 EBd20 EBd34 CTRL 3 Hz 6 Hz MYH6/α-MHC EBd20 EBd34 CTRL 3 Hz 6 Hz EBd20 EBd34 CTRL 3 Hz 6 Hz Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Cardiomyocyte proliferation and automaticity Cardiomyocyte proliferation (%) 25 ** 20 * 15 # & 10 5 0 EBd20 EBd34 Control 3Hz 6Hz 30% 39% 85% Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013. Vascularized cardiac tissues • Cardiomyocyte maturation – vasculature • Regenerative medicine - implants I II III Adapted from Nature Reviews, 2006. Cardiac tissue regeneration Cardiac regeneration: Replace lost cardiomyocytes Survival Time course study showing death of transplanted cardiomyocytes into a rat myocardial infarction model after MI. Zhang et al. J. Mol. Cell. Cardiol. (2001). Microvessel fragment-based neovascularization Advantages: • • • • • • • Maintain vessel shape - 3D arrangement All the relevant cell types – EC and PVC Connect to host circulation Form a hierarchical vasculature in vivo Robust PVC coverage Long-lasting - over 6 months post implantation High potential for application in regenerative medicine Week 2 Week 4 Nunes et al, Microcirculation 2010; Microvascular Research. 2010; PlosOne 2011. Microvasculature works as a metabolic interface between the host circulation and implanted hepatocytes Liver tissue mimics Nunes et al, Nature Scientific Reports. 2013. Can microvessels promote the survival of stem cellderived cardiomyocytes in vivo? Cardiac tissue mimics – 30 days post implantation Unpublished data. Stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte survival is extensive Cardiomyocyte area (cTNT staining, normalized to 1h) hESC-CM + adipose-derived microvessels Implanted for 30 days 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1h 6 weeks Unpublished data. Conclusions Human stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes in Biowires remodel in a manner consistent with enhanced maturation, displaying: • Increased cell area/size • Decreased proliferation • Reduced intrinsic firing rates • Improved electrophysiological and calcium handling properties • Downregulation of fetal gene program • Not adult phenotype • Neovasculatures from adipose-derived microvessels support extensive survival of hESC-derived cardiomyocytes Acknowledgments Wafa Altalhi (graduate student) Adrian Lee (summer student) Elena Bajenova • Radisic lab (U. Toronto) Jason Miklas Boyang Zhang Carol Laschinger • Laflamme lab (U. Washington) Benjamin VanBieber • Keller lab (McEwen Centre) Mark Gagliardi Nicole Dubois • Nanthakumar lab (U. Toronto) Stephane Masse Patrick Lai • Backx lab (U. Toronto) Jie Liu Rooz Sobbi • Coles lab (Hospital for Sick Children) Shabana Aafaqi Microvessel-derived vasculatures recruit PVCs and display specific AV identity A a d coverage perivascular %% coverage smooth musclecell B Week 4 Week 2 b c 100 80 60 40 20 0 0c 3c 8c 10c cultured angiogenic days Days 14i 28i implanted post-angiogenic Human ESC-cardiomyocytes respond to Isoproterenol treatment similarly to adult cardiomyocytes Day 0 Culture in biowire Day 7 Drug treatment Day 14 Analysis Force of contraction (mN/mm2) EB d20 0.6 0.5 p < 0.001 0.4 0.5Hz 0.3 * * 0.2 1Hz 0.1 0 Control ISO Unpublished data. Isoproterenol treatment induces the ‘fetal gene program’ and promotes hypertrophy aMHC 2 1.2 1 ANF 1.5 Ratio of normalized gene expression 0.8 1 0.6 0.4 0.5 Area (µm2) 0.2 0 0 EBd20 EBd34 CTRL EBd20 EBd34 CTRL ISO 20 2.5 ISO BNP 15 1.5 10 1 5 0.5 260.0 ±46 ISO 351.9 ±47 Table 1: Measurements performed on single cardiomyocytes dissociated from biowires at the end of cultivation. Cell area (μm2), average ±s.e.m., n= 3. bMHC 2 Control 0 EBd20 EBd34 CTRL 0 EBd20 EBd34 CTRL ISO ISO Unpublished data. Human iPSC-derived cardiomyocyte maturation Fig. 2: Schematic representation of cardiac development. Approximate human and murine gestational ages are indicated above the drawings and active transcription factors at respective stage are listed below. A schematic cross section through an early embryo is shown in the first panel to indicate the bilaterally symmetric cardiac structures composed of an endocardial tube (En) separated by an extracellular matrix (ECM) from the myocardial precursors (M). Bilateral dorsal aortae (DAo) are indicated. The second panel shows a frontal view of the midline cardiac tube. Gene expression analysis reveals early specification of chambers including right ventricle (RV) and left ventricle (LV) and atrium. Panels 3 and 4 represent frontal and left lateral views, respectively, of a looped heart tube. The pro-epicardial organ (ProE) is located posteriorly and gives rise to epicardial cells (Ep, shown in brown) that migrate over the ventricles, as indicated by arrows. Panels 5 and 6 depict vascular remodeling. The aortic arches in panel 5 (numbered) are populated by neural crest cells (NC, arrows) and are color coded to match the mature arterial segments indicated in panel 6. TA, truncus arteriosus. RSC, right subclavian artery. RCC, right carotid artery. LCC, left carotid artery. LSC, left subclavian artery. DA, ductus arteriosus. Ao, aorta. PA, pulmonary artery. Taken from Epstein and Buck (Pediatr Res 48: 717–724, 2000). Human stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte applications Yang et al, Circ. Res. 2014. Myocardial infarction Ischemia Electrical pacing improves calcium handling properties Nunes et al, Nature Methods 2013.