Abstract

Current cardiac drug safety assessments focus on hERG channel block and QT prolongation for evaluating arrhythmic risks, whereas the optogenetic approach focuses on the action potential (AP) waveform generated by a monolayer of human cardiomyocytes beating synchronously, thus assessing the contribution of several ion channels on the overall drug effect. This novel tool provides arrhythmogenic sensitizing by light-induced pacing in combination with non-invasive, all-optical measurements of cardiomyocyte APs and will improve assessment of drug-induced electrophysiological aberrancies. With the help of patch clamp electrophysiology measurements, we aimed to investigate whether the optogenetic modifications alter human cardiomyocytes' electrophysiology and how well the optogenetic analyses perform against this gold standard. Patch clamp electrophysiology measurements of non-transduced stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes compared to cells expressing the commercially available optogenetic constructs Optopatch and CaViar revealed no significant changes in action potential duration (APD) parameters. Thus, inserting the optogenetic constructs into cardiomyocytes does not significantly affect the cardiomyocyte's electrophysiological properties. When comparing the two methods against each other (patch clamp vs. optogenetic imaging) we found no significant differences in APD parameters for the Optopatch transduced cells, whereas the CaViar transduced cells exhibited modest increases in APD-values measured with optogenetic imaging. Thus, to broaden the screen, we combined optogenetic measurements of membrane potential and calcium transients with contractile motion measured by video motion tracking. Furthermore, to assess how optogenetic measurements can predict changes in membrane potential, or early afterdepolarizations (EADs), cells were exposed to cumulating doses of E-4031, a hERG potassium channel blocker, and drug effects were measured at both spontaneous and paced beating rates (1, 2 Hz). Cumulating doses of E-4031 produced prolonged APDs, followed by EADs and drug-induced quiescence. These observations were corroborated by patch clamp and contractility measurements. Similar responses, although more modest were seen with the IKs potassium channel blocker JNJ-303. In conclusion, optogenetic measurements of AP waveforms combined with optical pacing compare well with the patch clamp gold standard. Combined with video motion contractile measurements, optogenetic imaging provides an appealing alternative for electrophysiological screening of human cardiomyocyte responses in pharmacological efficacy and safety testings.

Highlights

  • Present cardiac safety assessments focus on the in vitro block of the human rapid component of the delayed inward rectifier IKr channel, combined with in vivo QT prolongation for evaluating the arrhythmic risks of novel drug candidates in preclinical development

  • Comprehensive in vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CIPA) proposes a multimodal approach of cardiac safety screening based on the integrated effects of drugs on the multiple cardiac ion channels that define cardiac excitability and repolarization and that play a role in delayed ventricular repolarization

  • Pearson correlations for the measured action potential duration (APD) parameters were 0.99 (p < 0.001) both for non-transduced against Optopatch-transduced cells, as well as for correlations between APD parameters measured by patch clamp and optogenetic imaging

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Summary

Introduction

Present cardiac safety assessments focus on the in vitro block of the human rapid component of the delayed inward rectifier IKr (hERG) channel, combined with in vivo QT prolongation for evaluating the arrhythmic risks of novel drug candidates in preclinical development. Block of the hERG channel delays cardiac repolarization, prolonging the action potential duration (APD) and the QT interval on ECG, and potentially increases the risk for the development of the cardiac arrhythmia Torsades de Pointes (TdP) (Sanguinetti et al, 1995; Redfern et al, 2003; Gintant et al, 2016) These assays have been effective in preventing drugs that induce TdP proarrhythmia from entering the market, it has been recognized that a drug’s proarrhythmic effect often is shaped by its action on multiple ion channels (Mirams et al, 2011). Predicted effects are verified with electrophysiological experiments in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CM)

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