Cardiac toxicity still represents a common adverse outcome causing drug attrition and post-marketing withdrawal. The development of relevantmodels resembling the human heart recently opened the path towards a more accurate detection of drug-induced human cardiac toxicity early in the drug development process. Organs-on-chip have been proposed as promising tools to recapitulatethe key aspects of thecardiac physiology and to provide a means to directly analyze functional readouts. In this scenario, a new device capable of continuous monitoring of electrophysiological signals from functionalhuman hearts-on-chip is here presented. The development of cardiac microtissues was achieved through a recently published method to control the mechanical environment, while the introduction of a technology consisting in micro-electrode coaxial guides allowed to conduct direct and non-destructive electrophysiology studies. The generated human cardiac microtissues exhibited synchronous spontaneous beating, as demonstrated by multi-point and continuous acquisition of cardiac field potential, and expression of relevant genes encoding for cardiac ion-channels. A proof-of-concept pharmacological validation on three drugs proved the proposed model to potentially be a powerful tool to evaluate functional cardiac toxicity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1758-5090/abe4c4 | DOI Listing |
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