Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium

The fabrication of biomimetic heart muscle suitable for pharmaceutical compound evaluation and disease modeling is hindered by limitations in our understanding of how to guide and assess the maturity of engineered myocardium in vitro. We hypothesized that tissue architecture serves as an important...

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Main Author: Sheehy, Sean Paul
Other Authors: Parker, Kevin Kit
Language:en_US
Published: Harvard University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11607
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:12274573
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-122745732015-08-14T15:43:06ZDesign Considerations for Engineered MyocardiumSheehy, Sean PaulBiomedical engineeringcardiac maturationcontractilityheartquality assurancequality indexstem cell-derived cardiac myocytesThe fabrication of biomimetic heart muscle suitable for pharmaceutical compound evaluation and disease modeling is hindered by limitations in our understanding of how to guide and assess the maturity of engineered myocardium in vitro. We hypothesized that tissue architecture serves as an important cue for directing the maturation of engineered heart tissues and that reliable assessment of maturity could be performed using a multi-parametric rubric utilizing cardiomyocytes of known developmental state as a basis for comparison. Physical micro-environmental cues are recognized to play a fundamental role in normal heart development, therefore we used micro-patterned extracellular matrix to direct isolated cardiac myocytes to self-assemble into anisotropic sheets reminiscent of the architecture observed in the laminar musculature of the heart. Comparison of global sarcomere alignment, gene expression, and contractile stress in engineered anisotropic myocardium to isotropic monolayers, as well as, adult ventricular tissue revealed that anisotropic engineered myocardium more closely matched the characteristics of adult ventricular tissue, than isotropic cultures of randomly organized cardiomyocytes. These findings support the notion that tissue architecture is an important cue for building mature engineered myocardium. Next, we sought to develop a quality assessment strategy that utilizes a core set of 64 experimental measurements representative of 4 major categories (i.e. gene expression, myofibril structure, electrical activity, and contractility) to provide a numeric score of how closely stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes match the physiological characteristics of mature, post-natal cardiomyocytes. The efficacy of this rubric was assessed by comparing anisotropic engineered tissues fabricated from commercially-available murine ES- (mES) and iPS- (miPS) derived myocytes against neonatal mouse ventricular myocytes. The quality index scores calculated for these cells revealed that the miPS-derived myocytes more closely resembled the neonate ventricular myocytes than the mES-derived myocytes. Taken together, the results of these studies provide valuable insight into the fabrication and validation of engineered myocardium that faithfully recapitulate the characteristics of mature ventricular myocardium found in vivo. These engineered tissue design and quality validation strategies may prove useful in developing heart muscle analogs from human stem cell-derived myocytes that more accurately predict patient response than currently used animal models.Engineering and Applied SciencesParker, Kevin Kit2014-06-06T21:15:55Z2014-06-0620142015-06-04T07:30:51ZThesis or DissertationSheehy, Sean Paul. 2014. Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11607http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:12274573en_USopenhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAAHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Biomedical engineering
cardiac maturation
contractility
heart
quality assurance
quality index
stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes
spellingShingle Biomedical engineering
cardiac maturation
contractility
heart
quality assurance
quality index
stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes
Sheehy, Sean Paul
Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
description The fabrication of biomimetic heart muscle suitable for pharmaceutical compound evaluation and disease modeling is hindered by limitations in our understanding of how to guide and assess the maturity of engineered myocardium in vitro. We hypothesized that tissue architecture serves as an important cue for directing the maturation of engineered heart tissues and that reliable assessment of maturity could be performed using a multi-parametric rubric utilizing cardiomyocytes of known developmental state as a basis for comparison. Physical micro-environmental cues are recognized to play a fundamental role in normal heart development, therefore we used micro-patterned extracellular matrix to direct isolated cardiac myocytes to self-assemble into anisotropic sheets reminiscent of the architecture observed in the laminar musculature of the heart. Comparison of global sarcomere alignment, gene expression, and contractile stress in engineered anisotropic myocardium to isotropic monolayers, as well as, adult ventricular tissue revealed that anisotropic engineered myocardium more closely matched the characteristics of adult ventricular tissue, than isotropic cultures of randomly organized cardiomyocytes. These findings support the notion that tissue architecture is an important cue for building mature engineered myocardium. Next, we sought to develop a quality assessment strategy that utilizes a core set of 64 experimental measurements representative of 4 major categories (i.e. gene expression, myofibril structure, electrical activity, and contractility) to provide a numeric score of how closely stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes match the physiological characteristics of mature, post-natal cardiomyocytes. The efficacy of this rubric was assessed by comparing anisotropic engineered tissues fabricated from commercially-available murine ES- (mES) and iPS- (miPS) derived myocytes against neonatal mouse ventricular myocytes. The quality index scores calculated for these cells revealed that the miPS-derived myocytes more closely resembled the neonate ventricular myocytes than the mES-derived myocytes. Taken together, the results of these studies provide valuable insight into the fabrication and validation of engineered myocardium that faithfully recapitulate the characteristics of mature ventricular myocardium found in vivo. These engineered tissue design and quality validation strategies may prove useful in developing heart muscle analogs from human stem cell-derived myocytes that more accurately predict patient response than currently used animal models. === Engineering and Applied Sciences
author2 Parker, Kevin Kit
author_facet Parker, Kevin Kit
Sheehy, Sean Paul
author Sheehy, Sean Paul
author_sort Sheehy, Sean Paul
title Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
title_short Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
title_full Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
title_fullStr Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
title_full_unstemmed Design Considerations for Engineered Myocardium
title_sort design considerations for engineered myocardium
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2014
url http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11607
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:12274573
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