AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create a systematic protocol for dissecting and preserving human hearts to improve biobanking for cardiovascular research, expanding on previous transcriptomics work.
  • Current cardiac biobanks are limited, mostly housing biopsy tissues, which makes it hard to link full organ conditions with clinical data.
  • Findings showed that RNA and metabolite stability were maintained for up to 12 hours after death, indicating the potential for high-quality multiomics data essential for understanding human cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Article Abstract

Objectives: We sought to develop a rigorous, systematic protocol for the dissection and preservation of human hearts for biobanking that expands previous success in postmortem transcriptomics to multiomics from paired tissue.

Background: Existing cardiac biobanks consist largely of biopsy tissue or explanted hearts in select diseases and are insufficient for correlating whole organ phenotype with clinical data.

Methods: We demonstrate optimal conditions for multiomics interrogation (ribonucleic acid (RNA) sequencing, untargeted metabolomics) in hearts by evaluating the effect of technical variables (storage solution, temperature) and simulated postmortem interval (PMI) on RNA and metabolite stability. We used bovine (n=3) and human (n=2) hearts fixed in PAXgene or snap-frozen with liquid nitrogen.

Results: Using a paired Wald test, only two of the genes assessed were differentially expressed between left ventricular samples from bovine hearts stored in PAXgene at 0 and 12 hours PMI (FDR q<0.05). We obtained similar findings in human left ventricular samples, suggesting stability of RNA transcripts at PMIs up to 12 hours. Different library preparation methods (mRNA poly-A capture vs. rRNA depletion) resulted in similar quality metrics with both library preparations achieving >95% of reads properly aligning to the reference genomes across all PMIs for bovine and human hearts. PMI had no effect on RNA Integrity Number or quantity of RNA recovered at the time points evaluated. Of the metabolites identified (855 total) using untargeted metabolomics of human left ventricular tissue, 503 metabolites remained stable across PMIs (0, 4, 8, 12 hours). Most metabolic pathways retained several stable metabolites.

Conclusions: Our data demonstrate a technically rigorous, reproducible protocol that will enhance cardiac biobanking practices and facilitate novel insights into human CVD.

Condensed Abstract: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality worldwide. Current biobanking practices insufficiently capture both the diverse array of phenotypes present in CVDs and the spatial heterogeneity across cardiac tissue sites. We have developed a rigorous and systematic protocol for the dissection and preservation of human cardiac biospecimens to enhance the availability of whole organ tissue for multiple applications. When combined with longitudinal clinical phenotyping, our protocol will enable multiomics in hearts to deepen our understanding of CVDs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10031913PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carpath.2022.107495DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dissection preservation
12
hearts
8
bovine hearts
8
rigorous systematic
8
systematic protocol
8
protocol dissection
8
preservation human
8
human hearts
8
untargeted metabolomics
8
pmi rna
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!