Abstract

BackgroundHuman induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) harbor the potential to differentiate into diverse cardiac cell types. Previous experimental efforts were primarily directed at the generation of hiPSC-derived cells with ventricular cardiomyocyte characteristics. Aiming at a straightforward approach for pacemaker cell modeling and replacement, we sought to selectively differentiate cells with nodal-type properties.MethodshiPSC were differentiated into spontaneously beating clusters by co-culturing with visceral endoderm-like cells in a serum-free medium. Subsequent culturing in a specified fetal bovine serum (FBS)-enriched cell medium produced a pacemaker-type phenotype that was studied in detail using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), immunocytochemistry, and patch-clamp electrophysiology. Further investigations comprised pharmacological stimulations and co-culturing with neonatal cardiomyocytes.ResultshiPSC co-cultured in a serum-free medium with the visceral endoderm-like cell line END-2 produced spontaneously beating clusters after 10–12 days of culture. The pacemaker-specific genes HCN4, TBX3, and TBX18 were abundantly expressed at this early developmental stage, while levels of sarcomeric gene products remained low. We observed that working-type cardiomyogenic differentiation can be suppressed by transfer of early clusters into a FBS-enriched cell medium immediately after beating onset. After 6 weeks under these conditions, sinoatrial node (SAN) hallmark genes remained at high levels, while working-type myocardial transcripts (NKX2.5, TBX5) were low. Clusters were characterized by regular activity and robust beating rates (70–90 beats/min) and were triggered by spontaneous Ca2+ transients recapitulating calcium clock properties of genuine pacemaker cells. They were responsive to adrenergic/cholinergic stimulation and able to pace neonatal rat ventricular myocytes in co-culture experiments. Action potential (AP) measurements of cells individualized from clusters exhibited nodal-type (63.4%) and atrial-type (36.6%) AP morphologies, while ventricular AP configurations were not observed.ConclusionWe provide a novel culture media-based, transgene-free approach for targeted generation of hiPSC-derived pacemaker-type cells that grow in clusters and offer the potential for disease modeling, drug testing, and individualized cell-based replacement therapy of the SAN.

Highlights

  • Human induced pluripotent stem cells harbor the potential to differentiate into diverse cardiac cell types

  • Differentiation of Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) colonies into pacemaker cell clusters (PCC) Differentiation experiments were performed with three different hiPSC lineages originating from human fibroblast cultures that were obtained from skin biopsies of healthy control probands

  • Data originating from line #1 are depicted in the main paper; replications using lines #2 and #3 are described in Additional file 5. hiPSC colonies were propagated in the undifferentiated state on top of a Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) feeder layer

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Summary

Introduction

Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) harbor the potential to differentiate into diverse cardiac cell types. Differentiation of hiPSC or human embryonic stem cells (hESC) into cardiomyocytes can be achieved by various approaches using embryoid bodies or direct differentiation strategies [3,4,5,6], and yield a mixed population of cells including nodal-type and working-type (i.e., atrial and ventricular chamber) action potential (AP) properties [7]. Considering the notion that cardiac differentiation of pluripotent stem cells yields mixed cardiac cell types [6, 7] and early, fetal cardiomyocytes comprise both pacemaker- and working-type properties [7], lineages were suggested to share a common developmental precursor [16,17,18,19]. Lineage separation depends on region-specific activation of gene programs [20] to yield either working-type myocytes that primarily develop myogenic characteristics, or nodal-type myocytes that express unique channel and receptor properties allowing for spontaneous depolarization and rate modulation according to neurohumoral demands

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