Abstract

<b>Background:</b> Human heart changes its energetic substrates from lactate and glucose to fatty acids during the neonatal period. Noticing the lack of fatty acids in media for the culture of cardiomyocytes derived from human pluripotent stem cells (hiPS-CM), researchers have supplemented mixtures of fatty acids to hiPS-CM and reported the enhancement in the maturation of hiPS-CM. In our previous studies, we separately supplemented two polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) or arachidonic acid (AA), to rat fetal cardiomyocytes and found that the supplementations upregulated the expressions of mRNAs for cardiomyocyte differentiation, fatty acid metabolism, and cellular adhesion. The enhancement in cellular contractility was attributed to the improvement in intercellular connection rather than a direct enhancement of the contractile force. <b>Methods:</b> This study reports the successive results of the effects of DHA or AA supplementation on hiPS-CM. In addition to the contractile force and mRNA measurements used in the previous study, we further investigated the effect of different cellular aggregations on the contractile force output by means of finite element analysis, measured glucose and fatty acids metabolites, and assessed cTNT and MLC2v expressions through immunofluorecsence evaluation. <b>Results:</b> It showed that the sole supplementation of albumin-conjugated DHA or AA can be taken up by hiPS-CM without other uptake-enhancing factors, and the supplementations may activate the CD36_­ERRγ metabolic pathway. DHA or AA supplementation increased the cellular contractile ratio on collagen gels and AA supplementation stimulated hiPS-CM aggregation to form cellular clusters. The enhancement effect on the hiPS-CM contractile force was modest since the increase in contractile force was not significant. AA supplementation was more effective than DHA supplementation because it significantly upregulated mRNA expressions of <i>P300</i> and <i>CD36</i>. However, finite element analysis showed that the formation of clusters on a collagen gel attenuated the contractile force exerted by the gel on its surroundings. <b>Conclusion:</b> DHA and AA, as having been supplemented in infant formulas, have no direct and significant enhancement effect on the performance of the hiPS-CM when they were supplemented individually, although they were able to enter the cellular metabolic system. The AA supplementation showed some auxiliary effect on the maturation of hiPS-CM, which is worthy of further investigation under the consideration of membrane composition alteration and remodeling of membrane molecules.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call