Abstract

Introduction: Pediatric Restrictive Cardiomyopathy (RCM) is a genetic cardiomyopathy resulting from profoundly increased stiffness of the wall of the cardiac ventricle with normal or low normal contractility. Treatment options are limited, with most patients necessitating heart transplant. Therapies that can improve diastolic function are needed for this severe disease. However, development of novel therapies has been limited by a paucity of models of this rare disease. Here, we develop two novel models of pediatric RCM and use novel high-throughput functional analysis to measure diastolic dysfunction and defects in calcium handling. Hypothesis: Patient-derived human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) models of pediatric RCM will exhibit increased resting tension indicative of diastolic dysfunction, as well as increased calcium sensitivity. Methods: Cardiomyocytes were differentiated from hiPSCs derived from two pediatric patients with RCM, as well as a paired isogenic CRISPR-corrected lines. Cells were replated onto polyacrylamide gels and stained with calcium sensitive dyes, and contractility, resting tension, and calcium sensitivity were measured using a novel high-throughput functional imaging platform. Results: RCM cells from both patients showed elevated contractility, resting tension, and calcium sensitivity compared to their isogenic controls. Conclusions: Patient-derived RCM cells show alterations in calcium sensitivity and resting tension that recapitulate and explain the diastolic dysfunction seen in patients. These lines, combined with the high-throughput measurement platform described here, will provide a powerful platform for exploring novel therapeutic strategies for this severe disease.

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