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Contractile work directly modulates mitochondrial protein levels in human engineered heart tissues. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Engineered heart tissues (EHTs) provide a valuable in vitro model for studying heart function, but current culture methods don't fully replicate the cardiac cycle.
  • A new bioreactor has been developed to simulate in vivo mechanics, allowing EHTs to undergo cyclic loading, which enhances their contractions and contractile work capacity.
  • The study found that mitochondrial protein levels increase with higher mechanical work in EHTs, indicating that mechanical loading significantly influences cellular adaptation in heart tissues.

Article Abstract

Engineered heart tissues (EHTs) have emerged as a robust in vitro model to study cardiac physiology. Although biomimetic culture environments have been developed to better approximate in vivo conditions, currently available methods do not permit full recapitulation of the four phases of the cardiac cycle. We have developed a bioreactor which allows EHTs to undergo cyclic loading sequences that mimic in vivo work loops. EHTs cultured under these working conditions exhibited enhanced concentric contractions but similar isometric contractions compared with EHTs cultured isometrically. EHTs that were allowed to shorten cyclically in culture had increased capacity for contractile work when tested acutely. Increased work production was correlated with higher levels of mitochondrial proteins and mitochondrial biogenesis; this effect was eliminated when tissues were cyclically shortened in the presence of a myosin ATPase inhibitor. Leveraging our novel in vitro method to precisely apply mechanical loads in culture, we grew EHTs under two loading regimes prescribing the same work output but with different associated afterloads. These groups showed no difference in mitochondrial protein expression. In loading regimes with the same afterload but different work output, tissues subjected to higher work demand exhibited elevated levels of mitochondrial protein. Our findings suggest that regulation of mitochondrial mass in cultured human EHTs is potently modulated by the mechanical work the tissue is permitted to perform in culture, presumably communicated through ATP demand. Precise application of mechanical loads to engineered heart tissues in culture represents a novel in vitro method for studying physiological and pathological cardiac adaptation. In this work, we present a novel bioreactor that allows for active length control of engineered heart tissues during extended tissue culture. Specific length transients were designed so that engineered heart tissues generated complete cardiac work loops. Chronic culture with various work loops suggests that mitochondrial mass and biogenesis are directly regulated by work output.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7311697PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00055.2020DOI Listing

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