Abstract

Electrophysiological maturation and integration of transplanted cardiomyocytes are essential to enhance safety and efficiency of cell replacement therapy. Yet, little is known about these important processes. The aim of our study was to perform a detailed analysis of electrophysiological maturation and integration of transplanted cardiomyocytes. Fetal cardiomyocytes expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein were transplanted into cryoinjured mouse hearts. At 6, 9 and 12days after transplantation, viable slices of recipient hearts were prepared and action potentials of transplanted and host cardiomyocytes within the slices were recorded by microelectrodes. In transplanted cells embedded in healthy host myocardium, action potential duration at 50% repolarization (APD50) decreased from 32.2±3.3ms at day 6 to 27.9±2.6ms at day 9 and 19.6±1.6ms at day 12. The latter value matched the APD50 of host cells (20.5±3.2ms, P=0.78). Integration improved in the course of time: 26% of cells at day 6 and 53% at day 12 revealed no conduction blocks up to a stimulation frequency of 10Hz. APD50 was inversely correlated to the quality of electrical integration. In transplanted cells embedded into the cryoinjury, which showed no electrical integration, APD50 was 49.2±4.3ms at day 12. Fetal cardiomyocytes transplanted into healthy myocardium integrate electrically and mature after transplantation, their action potential properties after 12days are comparable to those of host cardiomyocytes. Quality of electrical integration improves over time, but conduction blocks still occur at day 12 after transplantation. The pace of maturation correlates with the quality of electrical integration. Transplanted cells embedded in cryoinjured tissue still possess immature electrophysiological properties after 12days.

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