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Engineered Aging Cardiac Tissue Chip Model for Studying Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors :
Budhathoki, Sachin
Graham, Caleb
Sethu, Palaniappan
Kannappan, Ramaswamy
Source :
Cells Tissues Organs; 2022, Vol. 211 Issue 3, p348-359, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Due to the rapidly growing number of older people worldwide and the concomitant increase in cardiovascular complications, there is an urgent need for age-related cardiac disease modeling and drug screening platforms. In the present study, we developed a cardiac tissue chip model that incorporates hemodynamic loading and mimics essential aspects of the infarcted aging heart. We induced cellular senescence in H9c2 myoblasts using low-dose doxorubicin treatment. These senescent cells were then used to engineer cardiac tissue fibers, which were subjected to hemodynamic stresses associated with pressure-volume changes in the heart. Myocardial ischemia was modeled in the engineered cardiac tissue via hypoxic treatment. Our results clearly show that acute low-dose doxorubicin treatment-induced senescence, as evidenced by morphological and molecular markers, including enlarged and flattened nuclei, DNA damage response foci, and increased expression of cell cycle inhibitor p16<superscript>INK4a</superscript>, p53, and ROS. Under normal hemodynamic load, the engineered cardiac tissues demonstrated cell alignment and retained cardiac cell characteristics. Our senescent cardiac tissue model of hypoxia-induced myocardial infarction recapitulated the pathological disease hallmarks such as increased cell death and upregulated expression of ANP and BNP. In conclusion, the described methodology provides a novel approach to generate stress-induced aging cardiac cell phenotypes and engineer cardiac tissue chip models to study the cardiovascular disease pathologies associated with aging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14226405
Volume :
211
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cells Tissues Organs
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157619474
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000516954