Litcius/Paper detail

Human myofibroblasts increase the arrhythmogenic potential of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes

Robert D. Johnson, Ming Lei, John H. McVey, Patrizia Camelliti

2023Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) have the potential to remuscularize infarcted hearts but their arrhythmogenicity remains an obstacle to safe transplantation. Myofibroblasts are the predominant cell-type in the infarcted myocardium but their impact on transplanted hiPSC-CMs remains poorly defined. Here, we investigate the effect of myofibroblasts on hiPSC-CMs electrophysiology and Ca 2+ handling using optical mapping of advanced human cell coculture systems mimicking cell–cell interaction modalities. Human myofibroblasts altered the electrophysiology and Ca 2+ handling of hiPSC-CMs and downregulated mRNAs encoding voltage channels (K V 4.3, K V 11.1 and Kir6.2) and SERCA2a calcium pump. Interleukin-6 was elevated in the presence of myofibroblasts and direct stimulation of hiPSC-CMs with exogenous interleukin-6 recapitulated the paracrine effects of myofibroblasts. Blocking interleukin-6 reduced the effects of myofibroblasts only in the absence of physical contact between cell-types. Myofibroblast-specific connexin43 knockdown reduced functional changes in contact cocultures only when combined with interleukin-6 blockade. This provides the first in-depth investigation into how human myofibroblasts modulate hiPSC-CMs function, identifying interleukin-6 and connexin43 as paracrine- and contact-mediators respectively, and highlighting their potential as targets for reducing arrhythmic risk in cardiac cell therapy.

Topics & Concepts

MyofibroblastCell biologyParacrine signallingInduced pluripotent stem cellCell typeStem cellCellBiologyChemistryMedicineInternal medicineFibrosisReceptorEmbryonic stem cellBiochemistryGeneNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmiasIntegrated Circuits and Semiconductor Failure Analysis