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Epicardially secreted fibronectin drives cardiomyocyte maturation in 3D-engineered heart tissues.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Ischemic heart failure is due to irreversible loss of cardiomyocytes. Preclinical studies showed that human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-derived cardiomyocytes could remuscularize infarcted hearts and improve cardiac function. However, these cardiomyocytes remained immature. Incorporating hPSC-derived epicardial cells has been shown to improve cardiomyocyte maturation, but the exact mechanisms are unknown. We posited epicardial fibronectin (FN1) as a mediator of epicardial-cardiomyocyte crosstalk and assessed its role in driving hPSC-derived cardiomyocyte maturation in 3D-engineered heart tissues (3D-EHTs). We found that the loss of FN1 with peptide inhibition F(pUR4), CRISPR-Cas9-mediated FN1 knockout, or tetracycline-inducible FN1 knockdown in 3D-EHTs resulted in immature cardiomyocytes with decreased contractile function, and inefficient Ca2+ handling. Conversely, when we supplemented 3D-EHTs with recombinant human FN1, we could recover hPSC-derived cardiomyocyte maturation. Finally, our RNA-sequencing analyses found FN1 within a wider paracrine network of epicardial-cardiomyocyte crosstalk, thus solidifying FN1 as a key driver of hPSC-derived cardiomyocyte maturation in 3D-EHTs.

Description

Journal Title

Stem Cell Reports

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2213-6711
2213-6711

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier BV

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
British Heart Foundation (SP/15/7/31561)
Wellcome Trust (203568/Z/16/Z)
Wellcome Trust (203151/Z/16/Z)
British Heart Foundation (FS/18/46/33663)
Medical Research Council (MC_PC_17230)

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2023-12-07 18:36:53
Published version added
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2023-04-13 00:30:59
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