Publications by authors named "William T Pu"

Heterozygous truncating variants in the sarcomere protein titin (TTN) are the most common genetic cause of heart failure. To understand mechanisms that regulate abundant cardiomyocyte TTN expression we characterized highly conserved intron 1 sequences that exhibited dynamic changes in chromatin accessibility during differentiation of human cardiomyocytes from induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-CMs). Homozygous deletion of these sequences in mice caused embryonic lethality while heterozygous mice demonstrated allele-specific reduction in Ttn expression.

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Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia, affecting 59 million individuals worldwide. Impairment of atrial cardiomyocyte (aCM) gene regulatory mechanisms predisposes to atrial fibrillation. The transcription factor TBX5 is essential for normal atrial rhythm, and its inactivation causes loss of aCM enhancer accessibility, looping, and transcriptional identity.

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The ability to efficiently make precise genome edits in somatic tissues will have profound implications for gene therapy and basic science. CRISPR/Cas9 mediated homology-directed repair (HDR) is one approach that is commonly used to achieve precise and efficient editing in cultured cells. Previously, we developed a platform capable of delivering CRISPR/Cas9 gRNAs and donor templates via adeno-associated virus to induce HDR (CASAAV-HDR).

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Article Synopsis
  • Truncating mutations are significant contributors to cardiomyopathy, with different types of mutations presenting distinct cardiac issues in mouse models.
  • Germline mutations lead to defects in cardiac maturation, while cardiomyocyte-specific mutations cause pathological hypertrophy, but genetic mosaic mutations show no observable defects.
  • Treatment with adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors to restore lamin-A demonstrated that targeting non-cardiomyocyte cells is crucial for improving cardiac health associated with these mutations.
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Article Synopsis
  • Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) lack critical nanoscale structures called dyads that are vital for heart function, especially during heart failure.
  • The reduced expression of the protein cardiomyopathy-associated 5 (CMYA5) leads to disorganization of these dyads in heart failure and disrupts their assembly in hiPSC-CMs.
  • A miniaturized version of CMYA5 delivered via adeno-associated virus effectively improved the structure of dyads and normalized heart function under stress, enhancing calcium handling and contractile forces in hiPSC-CMs.
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From birth to adulthood, the mammalian heart grows primarily through increasing cardiomyocyte (CM) size, which is known as maturational hypertrophic growth. The Hippo-YAP signaling pathway is well known for regulating heart development and regeneration, but its roles in CM maturational hypertrophy have not been clearly addressed. Vestigial-like 4 (VGLL4) is a crucial component of the Hippo-YAP pathway, and it functions as a suppressor of YAP/TAZ, the terminal transcriptional effectors of this signaling pathway.

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Background: Calmodulinopathies are rare inherited arrhythmia syndromes caused by dominant heterozygous variants in , , or , which each encode the identical CaM (calmodulin) protein. We hypothesized that antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-mediated depletion of an affected calmodulin gene would ameliorate disease manifestations, whereas the other 2 calmodulin genes would preserve CaM level and function.

Methods: We tested this hypothesis using human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte and mouse models of pathogenic variants.

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Z-discs are core ultrastructural organizers of cardiomyocytes that modulate many facets of cardiac pathogenesis. Yet a comprehensive proteomic atlas of Z-disc-associated components remain incomplete. Here, we established an adeno-associated virus (AAV)-delivered, cardiomyocyte-specific, proximity-labeling approach to characterize the Z-disc proteome in vivo.

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Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is mammals' primary non-shivering thermogenesis organ, and the molecular mechanisms regulating BAT growth and adipogenesis are largely unknown. The Hippo-YAP pathway has been well-known for controlling organ size, and Vestigial like 4 (VGLL4) is a transcriptional regulator that modulates the Hippo-YAP pathway by competing against YAP for binding to TEAD proteins. In this study, we dissected the function of VGLL4 in regulating BAT development.

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Human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) have proven invaluable for cardiac disease modeling and regeneration. Challenges with quality, inter-batch consistency, cryopreservation and scale remain, reducing experimental reproducibility and clinical translation. Here, we report a robust stirred suspension cardiac differentiation protocol, and we perform extensive morphological and functional characterization of the resulting bioreactor-differentiated iPSC-CMs (bCMs).

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Article Synopsis
  • Cardiac hypertrophy is a response to increased pressure in the heart but can lead to heart failure if it persists, and recent research suggests that long noncoding RNAs may play a key role in this process.
  • Researchers measured RNA levels in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and used various techniques, including knockout mice and transcriptome analysis, to explore the function of a specific lincRNA called lincRNA-p21 and its interactions with proteins like KAP1.
  • Results showed that both lincRNA-p21 and KAP1 are crucial for the development of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets for managing heart conditions.
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Mechanisms of cell fate specification remain a central question for developmental biology and regenerative medicine. The pioneer factor ETV2 is a master regulator for the endothelial cell (EC) lineage specification. Here, we studied mechanisms of ETV2-driven fate specification using a highly efficient system in which ETV2 directs human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived mesodermal progenitors to form ECs over two days.

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One of the features of pathological cardiac hypertrophy is enhanced translation and protein synthesis. Translational inhibition has been shown to be an effective means of treating cardiac hypertrophy, although system-wide side effects are common. Regulators of translation, such as cardiac-specific long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), could provide new, more targeted therapeutic approaches to inhibit cardiac hypertrophy.

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In the last decade human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) proved to be valuable for cardiac disease modeling and cardiac regeneration, yet challenges with scale, quality, inter-batch consistency, and cryopreservation remain, reducing experimental reproducibility and limiting clinical translation. Here, we report a robust cardiac differentiation protocol that uses Wnt modulation and a stirred suspension bioreactor to produce on average 124 million hiPSC-CMs with >90% purity using a variety of hiPSC lines (19 differentiations; 10 iPSC lines). After controlled freeze and thaw, bioreactor-derived CMs (bCMs) showed high viability (>90%), interbatch reproducibility in cellular morphology, function, drug response and ventricular identity, which was further supported by single cell transcriptomes.

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Rare coding mutations cause ∼45% of congenital heart disease (CHD). Noncoding mutations that perturb cis-regulatory elements (CREs) likely contribute to the remaining cases, but their identification has been problematic. Using a lentiviral massively parallel reporter assay (lentiMPRA) in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs), we functionally evaluated 6,590 noncoding de novo variants (ncDNVs) prioritized from the whole-genome sequencing of 750 CHD trios.

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Background: Mature endothelial cells (ECs) are heterogeneous, with subtypes defined by tissue origin and position within the vascular bed (ie, artery, capillary, vein, and lymphatic). How this heterogeneity is established during the development of the vascular system, especially arteriovenous specification of ECs, remains incompletely characterized.

Methods: We used droplet-based single-cell RNA sequencing and multiplexed error-robust fluorescence in situ hybridization to define EC and EC progenitor subtypes from E9.

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Understanding how the atrial and ventricular heart chambers maintain distinct identities is a prerequisite for treating chamber-specific diseases. Here, we selectively knocked out (KO) the transcription factor in the atrial working myocardium to evaluate its requirement for atrial identity. Atrial inactivation downregulated atrial cardiomyocyte (aCM) selective gene expression.

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Background: The relationship between heart failure (HF) and atrial fibrillation (AF) is clear, with up to half of patients with HF progressing to AF. The pathophysiological basis of AF in the context of HF is presumed to result from atrial remodeling. Upregulation of the transcription factor FOG2 (friend of GATA2; encoded by ) is observed in human ventricles during HF and causes HF in mice.

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Unlabelled: Z-lines are core ultrastructural organizers of cardiomyocytes that modulate many facets of cardiac pathogenesis. Yet a comprehensive proteomic atlas of Z-line-associated components remain incomplete. Here, we established an adeno-associated virus (AAV)-delivered, cardiomyocyte-specific, proximity-labeling approach to characterize the Z-line proteome in vivo.

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Background: The importance of mitochondria in normal heart function are well recognized and recent studies have implicated changes in mitochondrial metabolism with some forms of heart disease. Previous studies demonstrated that knockdown of the mitochondrial ribosomal protein S5 (MRPS5) by small interfering RNA (siRNA) inhibits mitochondrial translation and thereby causes a mitonuclear protein imbalance. Therefore, we decided to examine the effects of MRPS5 loss and the role of these processes on cardiomyocyte proliferation.

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