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Magnetics-Based Approach for Fine-Tuning Afterload in Engineered Heart Tissues

Version 2 2019-09-16, 23:45
Version 1 2019-06-24, 20:03
Posted on 2019-09-16 - 23:45
Afterload plays important roles during heart development and disease progression; however, studying these effects in a laboratory setting is challenging. Current techniques lack the ability to precisely and reversibly alter afterload over time. Here, we describe a magnetics-based approach for achieving this control and present results from experiments in which this technique was employed to sequentially increase afterload applied to rat engineered heart tissues (rEHTs) over a 7-day period. Over the observation period, the contractile properties of rEHTs grown on control posts marginally increased. The average post deflection, fractional shortening, and twitch velocities measured for afterload-affected tissues initially followed this same trend but fell below control tissue values at high magnitudes of afterload. However, the average force, force production rate, and force relaxation rate for these rEHTs were consistently up to three-fold higher than for control tissues. Transcript levels of hypertrophic or fibrotic markers and cell size remained unaffected by afterload, suggesting that the increased force output was not accompanied by pathological remodeling. Accordingly, the increased force output was fully reversed to control levels during a stepwise decrease in afterload over 4 h. Afterload application did not affect systolic or diastolic tissue lengths, indicating that the afterload system was likely not a source of changes in preload strain. In summary, the afterload system developed herein is capable of fine-tuning EHT afterload while simultaneously allowing optical force measurements. Using this system, we found that small daily alterations in afterload can enhance the contractile properties of rEHTs, while larger increases can have temporarily undesirable effects. Overall, these findings demonstrate the significant role that afterload plays in cardiac force regulation. Future studies with this system may allow for novel insights into the mechanisms that underlie afterload-induced adaptations in cardiac force development.

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