Back to Search Start Over

Energy utilization of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte in Fabry disease

Authors :
Yuh Lih Chang
Jiin Cherng Yen
Shih Hwa Chiou
Yu Han Chen
Shih Jie Chou
Wen Chung Yu
Yung Yang Liu
Dau Ming Niu
Yueh Chien
Shing Jong Lin
Wen Yeh Chen
Shih Jen Chen
Hsin Bang Leu
Chien Ying Wang
Jaw Wen Chen
Wei Chao Chang
Source :
International journal of cardiology. 232
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background Fabry disease (FD) is a lysosomal storage disease in which glycosphingolipids (GB3) accumulate in organs of the human body, leading to idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and target organ damage. Its pathophysiology is still poorly understood. Objectives We aimed to generate patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) from FD patients presenting cardiomyopathy to determine whether the model could recapitulate key features of the disease phenotype and to investigate the energy metabolism in Fabry disease. Methods Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a 30-year-old Chinese man with a diagnosis of Fabry disease, GLA gene (IVS4+919G>A) mutation were reprogrammed into iPSCs and differentiated into iPSC-CMs and energy metabolism was analyzed in iPSC-CMs. Results The FD-iPSC-CMs recapitulated numerous aspects of the FD phenotype including reduced GLA activity, cellular hypertrophy, GB3 accumulation and impaired contractility. Decreased energy metabolism with energy utilization shift to glycolysis was observed, but the decreased energy metabolism was not modified by enzyme rescue replacement (ERT) in FD-iPSCs-CMs. Conclusion This model provided a promising in vitro model for the investigation of the underlying disease mechanism and development of novel therapeutic strategies for FD. This potential remedy for enhancing the energetic network and utility efficiency warrants further study to identify novel therapies for the disease.

Details

ISSN :
18741754
Volume :
232
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad06b94121d4987561f3ffe55c24c98c