Cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) are known to regulate cardiomyocyte (CM) function in vivo and in two-dimensional in vitro cultures. This study examined the effect of CF activation on the regulation of CM electrical activity in a three-dimensional (3-D) microtissue environment. Using a scaffold-free 3-D platform with interspersed neonatal rat ventricular CMs and CFs, G-mediated signaling was selectively enhanced in CFs by Gα adenoviral infection before coseeding with CMs in nonadhesive hydrogels. After 3 days, the microtissues were analyzed by signaling assay, histological staining, quantitative PCR, Western blots, optical mapping with voltage- or Ca-sensitive dyes, and microelectrode recordings of CF resting membrane potential (RMP). Enhanced G signaling in CFs increased microtissue size and profibrotic and prohypertrophic markers. Expression of constitutively active Gα in CFs prolonged CM action potential duration (by 33%) and rise time (by 31%), prolonged Ca transient duration (by 98%) and rise time (by 65%), and caused abnormal electrical activity based on depolarization-induced automaticity. Constitutive G activation in CFs also depolarized RMP from -33 to -20 mV and increased connexin 43 and connexin 45 expression. Computational modeling confers that elevated RMP and increased cell-cell coupling between CMs and CFs in a 3-D environment could lead to automaticity. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that CF activation alone is capable of altering action potential and Ca transient characteristics of CMs, leading to proarrhythmic electrical activity. Our results also emphasize the importance of a 3-D environment where cell-cell interactions are prevalent, underscoring that CF activation in 3-D tissue plays a significant role in modulating CM electrophysiology and arrhythmias. In a three-dimensional microtissue model, which lowers baseline activation of cardiac fibroblasts but enables cell-cell, paracrine, and cell-extracellular matrix interactions, we demonstrate that selective cardiac fibroblast activation by enhanced G signaling, a pathophysiological trigger in the diseased heart, modulates cardiomyocyte electrical activity, leading to proarrhythmogenic automaticity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5668610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00181.2017DOI Listing

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