Frame-hydrogel methodology for engineering highly functional cardiac tissue constructs

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Abstract

Engineered cardiac tissues hold tremendous promise for in vitro drug discovery, studies of heart development and disease, and therapeutic applications. Here, we describe a versatile “frame-hydrogel” methodology to generate engineered cardiac tissues with highly mature functional properties. This methodology has been successfully utilized with a variety of cell sources (neonatal rat ventricular myocytes, human and mouse pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes) to generate tissues with diverse 3D geometries (patch, bundle, network) and levels of structural and functional anisotropy. Maturation of such engineered cardiac tissues is rapidly achieved without the need for exogenous electrical or mechanical stimulation or use of complex bioreactors, with tissues routinely reaching conduction velocities and specific forces of 25 cm/s and 20 mN/mm2, respectively, and forces per input cardiomyocyte of up to 12 nN. This method is reproducible and readily scalable to generate small tissues ideal for in vitro testing as well as tissues with large, clinically relevant dimensions.

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Helfer, A., & Bursac, N. (2021). Frame-hydrogel methodology for engineering highly functional cardiac tissue constructs. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2158, pp. 171–186). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-0668-1_13

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