Cardiomyocyte cultures with controlled macroscopic anisotropy - A model for functional electrophysiological studies of cardiac muscle

被引:215
作者
Bursac, N [1 ]
Parker, KK [1 ]
Iravanian, S [1 ]
Tung, L [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
关键词
anisotropy; cardiac electrophysiology; optical mapping; cell culture;
D O I
10.1161/01.RES.0000047530.88338.EB
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Structural and functional cardiac anisotropy varies with the development, location, and pathophysiology in the heart. The goal of this study was to design a cell culture model system in which the degree, change in fiber direction, and discontinuity of anisotropy can be controlled over centimeter-size length scales. Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes were cultured on fibronectin on 20-mm diameter circular cover slips. Structure-function relationships were assessed using immunostaining and optical mapping. Cell culture on microabraded cover slips yielded cell elongation and coalignment in the direction of abrasion, and uniform, macroscopically continuous, elliptical propagation with point stimulation. Coarser microabrasion (wider and deeper abrasion grooves) increased longitudinal (23.5 to 37.2 cm/s; r=0.66) and decreased transverse conduction velocity (18.1 to 9.2 cm/s; r=-0.84), which resulted in increased longitudinal-to-transverse velocity anisotropy ratios (1.3 to 3.7, n=61). A thin transition zone between adjacent uniformly anisotropic areas with 45 or 90 difference in fiber orientation acted as a secondary source during 2x threshold field stimulus. Cell culture on cover slips micropatterned with 12- or 25-mum wide fibronectin lines and previously coated with decreasing concentrations of background fibronectin yielded transition from continuous to discontinuous anisotropic architecture with longitudinally oriented intercellular clefts, decreased transverse velocity (16.9 to 2.6 cm/s; r=-0.95), increased velocity anisotropy ratios (1.6 to 5.6, n=70), and decreased longitudinal velocity (36.4 to 14.6 cm/s; r=-0.85) for anisotropy ratios >3.5. Cultures of cardiac myocytes with controlled degree, uniformity and continuity of structural, and functional anisotropy may enable systematic 2-dimensional in vitro studies of macroscopic structure-related mechanisms of reentrant arrhythmias. The full text of this article is available at http://www.circresaha.org.
引用
收藏
页码:E45 / E54
页数:10
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]   MAPPING OF RESET OF ANATOMIC AND FUNCTIONAL REENTRY IN ANISOTROPIC RABBIT VENTRICULAR MYOCARDIUM [J].
BOERSMA, L ;
BRUGADA, J ;
KIRCHHOF, C ;
ALLESSIE, M .
CIRCULATION, 1994, 89 (02) :852-862
[2]   Cardiac muscle tissue engineering: toward an in vitro model for electrophysiological studies [J].
Bursac, N ;
Papadaki, M ;
Cohen, RJ ;
Schoen, FJ ;
Eisenberg, SR ;
Carrier, R ;
Vunjak-Novakovic, G ;
Freed, LE .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-HEART AND CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 277 (02) :H433-H444
[3]  
Bursac N, 2002, CIRCULATION, V106, P304
[4]  
BURSAC N, 2002, PACE, V25, P578
[5]   Reduced anisotropy of action potential conduction in left ventricular hypertrophy [J].
Carey, PA ;
Turner, M ;
Fry, CH ;
Sheridan, DJ .
JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 12 (07) :830-835
[6]   SLOW CONDUCTION IN THE INFARCTED HUMAN HEART - ZIGZAG COURSE OF ACTIVATION [J].
DEBAKKER, JMT ;
VANCAPELLE, FJL ;
JANSE, MJ ;
TASSERON, S ;
VERMEULEN, JT ;
DEJONGE, N ;
LAHPOR, JR .
CIRCULATION, 1993, 88 (03) :915-926
[7]   Contact fluorescence imaging of reentry in monolayers of cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes [J].
Entcheva, E ;
Lu, SN ;
Troppman, RH ;
Sharma, V ;
Tung, L .
JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, 2000, 11 (06) :665-676
[8]   ANISOTROPIC CONDUCTION IN MONOLAYERS OF NEONATAL RAT-HEART CELLS CULTURED ON COLLAGEN SUBSTRATE [J].
FAST, VG ;
KLEBER, AG .
CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 1994, 75 (03) :591-595
[9]   Activation of cardiac tissue by extracellular electrical shocks -: Formation of 'secondary sources' at intercellular clefts in monolayers of cultured myocytes [J].
Fast, VG ;
Rohr, S ;
Gillis, AM ;
Kléber, AG .
CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 1998, 82 (03) :375-385
[10]   Anisotropic activation spread in heart cell monolayers assessed by high-resolution optical mapping - Role of tissue discontinuities [J].
Fast, VG ;
Darrow, BJ ;
Saffitz, JE ;
Kleber, AG .
CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 1996, 79 (01) :115-127