Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have invented a new way to create
three-dimensional human heart tissue from stem cells. The tissue can be
used to model disease and test drugs, and it opens the door for a
precision medicine approach to treating heart disease. Although there
are existing techniques to make three-dimensional tissues from heart
cells, the new method dramatically reduces the number of cells needed,
making it an easier, cheaper, and more efficient system.
"We have
bioengineered micro-scale heart tissues with a method that can easily be
reproduced, which will enable scientists in stem cell biology and the
drug industry to study heart cells in their proper context," said first
author Nathaniel Huebsch, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the Conklin lab
at Gladstone. "In turn, this will enhance our ability to discover
treatments for heart disease."
Creating heart cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) that are derived from a patient's skin cells
enables scientists to study and test drugs on that patient's specific
disease. However, cells made from iPSCs are relatively immature,
resembling heart cells in an embryo more than cells in an adult. As
such, these cells are inadequate for drug testing because they do not
properly predict how a drug will affect adult heart cells. Additionally,
heart cells created from iPSCs are challenging to make and work with,
so creating large quantities can be difficult. Therefore, the fewer
cells needed, the better.
The micro heart muscle addresses both of these concerns. Forcing the
cells to organize and stretch into three-dimensional tissue helps spur
development and coaxes them into resembling more mature cells that can better predict how a drug will affect adult heart cells. Also, the new method—published in the journal Scientific Reports—requires
a thousand-fold fewer cells to grow the tissue than other tissue
engineering techniques. Using fewer cells allows the scientists to do
many more experiments with the same amount of resources.
Working in collaboration with Kevin Healy, PhD, at the University of California, Berkeley, the researchers first generated heart muscle cells and connective tissue cells
from iPSCs. They then combined these cells in a special dish shaped
like a tiny dog bone. This unique shape encouraged the cells to
self-organize into elongated muscle fibers. Within a couple of days, the
micro tissues resembled heart muscle both structurally and
functionally. For example, when the researchers tested how the tissue
responded to certain drugs that impair fetal heart cells but not adult heart cells, the micro heart muscle performed more like adult heart tissue.
"The beauty of this technique is that it is very easy and robust, but
it still allows you to create three-dimensional miniature tissues that
function like normal tissues," said senior author Bruce Conklin, MD, a
senior investigator at Gladstone. "Our research shows that you can
create these complex tissues with a simple template that exploits the
inherent properties of these cells
to self-organize. We think that the micro heart muscle will provide a
superior resource for conducting research and developing therapies for
heart disease."
SOURCE
MedicalXpress and Provided by:
Gladstone Institutes



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