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Assessment of sarcomere shortening and calcium transient in primary human and dog ventricular myocytes.

Authors :
Gao, BaoXi
Abi-Gerges, Najah
Truong, Ky
Stafford, Alexa
Nguyen, William
Sutherland, Weston
Vargas, Hugo M.
Qu, Yusheng
Source :
Journal of Pharmacological & Toxicological Methods. Sep2023, Vol. 123, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Understanding translation from preclinical observations to clinical findings is important for evaluating the efficacy and safety of novel compounds. Of relevance to cardiac safety is profiling drug effects on cardiomyocyte (CM) sarcomere shortening and intracellular Ca2+ dynamics. Although CM from different animal species have been used to assess such effects, primary human CM isolated from human organ donor heart represent an ideal non-animal alternative approach. We performed a study to evaluate primary human CM and have them compared to freshly isolated dog cardiomyocytes for their basic function and responses to positive inotropes with well-known mechanisms. Our data showed that simultaneous assessment of sarcomere shortening and Ca2+-transient can be performed with both myocytes using the IonOptix system. Amplitude of sarcomere shortening and Ca2+-transient (CaT) were significantly higher in dog compared to human CM in the basic condition (absence of treatment), while longer duration of sarcomere shortening and CaT were observed in human cells. We observed that human and dog CMs have similar pharmacological responses to five inotropes with different mechanisms, including dobutamine and isoproterenol (β-adrenergic stimulation), milrinone (PDE3 inhibition), pimobendan and levosimendan (increase of Ca2+sensitization as well as PDE3 inhibition). In conclusion, our study suggests that myocytes obtained from both human donor hearts and dog hearts can be used to simultaneously assess drug-induced effects on sarcomere shortening and CaT using the IonOptix platform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10568719
Volume :
123
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Pharmacological & Toxicological Methods
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173608492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vascn.2023.107278