Early embryonic sensitivity to cyclophosphamide in cardiac differentiation from human embryonic stem cells.

Cell Biol Int

Occupational Disease Research Center, Peking University Third Hospital, Haidian District, Beijing, People's Republic of China.

Published: September 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study focuses on the use of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) to detect the cardiotoxic effects of cyclophosphamide (CPA) during embryonic development.
  • It demonstrates a developed protocol for cardiac differentiation, showing that cardiac precursor cells are more sensitive to CPA compared to late mature cardiomyocytes.
  • The findings suggest that in vitro testing with hESCs could reduce the need for animal testing while efficiently evaluating the toxicity of various chemicals.

Article Abstract

hESCs (human embryonic stem cells) can differentiate into tissue derivatives of all three germ layers in vitro and mimic the development of the embryo in vivo. In this study, we have investigated the potential of an hESC-based assay for the detection of toxicity to cardiac differentiation in embryonic development. First of all, we developed the protocol of cardiac induction from hESCs according to our previous work and distinguished cardiac precursor cells and late mature cardiomyocytes from differentiated cells, demonstrated by the Q-PCR (quantitative real-time PCR), immunocytochemistry and flow cytometry analysis. In order to test whether CPA (cyclophosphamide) induces developmental and cellular toxicity in the human embryo, we exposed the differentiating cells from hESCs to CPA (a well-known proteratogen) at different stages. We have found that a high concentration of CPA could inhibit cardiac differentiation of hESCs. Two separate exposure intervals were used to determine the effects of CPA on cardiac precursor cells and late mature cardiomyocytes respectively. The cardiac precursor cells were sensitive to CPA in non-cytotoxic concentrations for the expression of the cardiac-specific mRNA markers Nkx2.5 (NK2 transcription factor related, locus 5), GATA-4 (GATA binding protein 4 transcription factor) and TNNT2 (troponin T type 2). Non-cytotoxic CPA concentrations did not affect the mRNA markers' expression in late mature cardiomyocytes, indicating that cardiac precursors were more sensitive to CPA than late cardiomyocytes in cardiogenesis. We set up the in vitro developmental toxicity test model so as to reduce the number of test animals and expenses without compromising the safety of consumers and patients. Furthermore, such in vitro methods may be possibly suited to test a large number of chemicals than the classical employed in vivo tests.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/CBI20110031DOI Listing

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