posted on 2021-01-04, 22:14authored byJake A. Melby, Willem J. de Lange, Jianhua Zhang, David S. Roberts, Stanford D. Mitchell, Trisha Tucholski, Gina Kim, Andreas Kyrvasilis, Sean J. McIlwain, Timothy J. Kamp, J. Carter Ralphe, Ying Ge
Three-dimensional (3D) human induced
pluripotent stem cell-derived
engineered cardiac tissues (hiPSC-ECTs) have emerged as a promising
alternative to two-dimensional hiPSC-cardiomyocyte monolayer systems
because hiPSC-ECTs are a closer representation of endogenous cardiac
tissues and more faithfully reflect the relevant cardiac pathophysiology.
The ability to perform functional and molecular assessments using
the same hiPSC-ECT construct would allow for more reliable correlation
between observed functional performance and underlying molecular events,
and thus is critically needed. Herein, for the first time, we have
established an integrated method that permits sequential assessment
of functional properties and top-down proteomics from the same single
hiPSC-ECT construct. We quantitatively determined the differences
in isometric twitch force and the sarcomeric proteoforms between two
groups of hiPSC-ECTs that differed in the duration of time of 3D-ECT
culture. Importantly, by using this integrated method we discovered
a new and strong correlation between the measured contractile parameters
and the phosphorylation levels of alpha-tropomyosin between the two
groups of hiPSC-ECTs. The integration of functional assessments together
with molecular characterization by top-down proteomics in the same
hiPSC-ECT construct enables a holistic analysis of hiPSC-ECTs to accelerate
their applications in disease modeling, cardiotoxicity, and drug discovery.
Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD022814.