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Conditional immortalization of human atrial myocytes for the generation of in vitro models of atrial fibrillation

Authors :
Niels Harlaar
Sven O. Dekker
Juan Zhang
Rebecca R. Snabel
Marieke W. Veldkamp
Arie O. Verkerk
Carla Cofiño Fabres
Verena Schwach
Lente J. S. Lerink
Mathilde R. Rivaud
Aat A. Mulder
Willem E. Corver
Marie José T. H. Goumans
Dobromir Dobrev
Robert J. M. Klautz
Martin J. Schalij
Gert Jan C. Veenstra
Robert Passier
Thomas J. van Brakel
Daniël A. Pijnappels
Antoine A. F. de Vries
Applied Stem Cell Technologies
TechMed Centre
Experimental Cardiology
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Medical Biology
Cardiology
Source :
Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 389-402, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 389-402. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 4, pp. 389-402, Nature Biomedical Engineering. NATURE PORTFOLIO, Nature Biomedical Engineering, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6(4), 389-402. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Functional human atrial myocytes derived from foetal atrial tissue can be massively expanded via a conditional cell-immortalization method, and used in in vitro models of atrial fibrillation.The lack of a scalable and robust source of well-differentiated human atrial myocytes constrains the development of in vitro models of atrial fibrillation (AF). Here we show that fully functional atrial myocytes can be generated and expanded one-quadrillion-fold via a conditional cell-immortalization method relying on lentiviral vectors and the doxycycline-controlled expression of a recombinant viral oncogene in human foetal atrial myocytes, and that the immortalized cells can be used to generate in vitro models of AF. The method generated 15 monoclonal cell lines with molecular, cellular and electrophysiological properties resembling those of primary atrial myocytes. Multicellular in vitro models of AF generated using the immortalized atrial myocytes displayed fibrillatory activity (with activation frequencies of 6-8 Hz, consistent with the clinical manifestation of AF), which could be terminated by the administration of clinically approved antiarrhythmic drugs. The conditional cell-immortalization method could be used to generate functional cell lines from other human parenchymal cells, for the development of in vitro models of human disease.

Details

ISSN :
2157846X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 389-402, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 389-402. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6, 4, pp. 389-402, Nature Biomedical Engineering. NATURE PORTFOLIO, Nature Biomedical Engineering, Nature Biomedical Engineering, 6(4), 389-402. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d70ba6fcbebb587ffe9e4ecc6d3c032