Biomaterials and Biosystems (Dec 2022)

Contraction pressure analysis using optical imaging in normal and MYBPC3-mutated hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes grown on matrices with tunable stiffness

  • Matthijs Snelders,
  • Iris H. Koedijk,
  • Julia Schirmer,
  • Otto Mulleners,
  • Juancito van Leeuwen,
  • Nathalie P. de Wagenaar,
  • Oscar Bartulos,
  • Pieter Voskamp,
  • Stefan Braam,
  • Zeno Guttenberg,
  • A.H. Jan Danser,
  • Danielle Majoor-Krakauer,
  • Erik Meijering,
  • Ingrid van der Pluijm,
  • Jeroen Essers

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
p. 100068

Abstract

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Current in vivo disease models and analysis methods for cardiac drug development have been insufficient in providing accurate and reliable predictions of drug efficacy and safety. Here, we propose a custom optical flow-based analysis method to quantitatively measure recordings of contracting cardiomyocytes on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), compatible with medium-throughput systems.Movement of the PDMS was examined by covalently bound fluorescent beads on the PDMS surface, differences caused by increased substrate stiffness were compared, and cells were stimulated with β-agonist. We further validated the system using cardiomyocytes treated with endothelin-1 and compared their contractions against control and cells incubated with receptor antagonist bosentan. After validation we examined two MYBPC3-mutant patient-derived cell lines.Recordings showed that higher substrate stiffness resulted in higher contractile pressure, while beating frequency remained similar to control. β-agonist stimulation resulted in both higher beating frequency as well as higher pressure values during contraction and relaxation. Cells treated with endothelin-1 showed an increased beating frequency, but a lower contraction pressure. Cells treated with both endothelin-1 and bosentan remained at control level of beating frequency and pressure. Lastly, both MYBPC3-mutant lines showed a higher beating frequency and lower contraction pressure.Our validated method is capable of automatically quantifying contraction of hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes on a PDMS substrate of known shear modulus, returning an absolute value. Our method could have major benefits in a medium-throughput setting.

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