A novel patch-clamp based method for stimulating monolayers of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived atrial-like cardiomyocytes reduces electrophysiological heterogeneity and promotes consistent responses to SK channel inhibition

Physiology 2023 (Harrogate, UK) (2023) Proc Physiol Soc 54, C10

Oral Communications: A novel patch-clamp based method for stimulating monolayers of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived atrial-like cardiomyocytes reduces electrophysiological heterogeneity and promotes consistent responses to SK channel inhibition

Andrew S. Butler1, Stephen C. Harmer1, Jules C. Hancox1,

1School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of Bristol Bristol United Kingdom,

View other abstracts by:


Introduction: Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) represent a useful in vitro model of cardiac function. Isolated iPSC-CMs, however, exhibit significant electrophysiological heterogeneity which hinders their utility as a model system for the study of certain individual cardiac currents [1]. Differentiation of iPSC-CMs using conventional methodologies produces cells which exhibit a ventricular-like phenotype, but the inclusion of retinoic acid (RA) during differentiation produces iPSC-CMs with an atrial-like phenotype [2, 3]. In the adult heart, the current mediated by small conductance, calcium-activated potassium channels (ISK) is an atrial-selective current [4, 5]. Functional expression of ISK within atrial-like iPSC-CMs has not been well investigated.

Aims: The present study therefore aimed to investigate atrial-like iPSC-CMs as a model system for the study of ISK.

Methods: iPSC-CMs were differentiated in the presence of RA or a DMSO control in order to generate cells with a more atrial- or ventricular-like phenotype respectively. Following differentiation, iPSC-CMs were dissociated and plated sparsely as isolated cells (RA- or DMSO-iPSC-CMs) or plated densely to promote reformation of a confluent monolayer (RA- or DMSO-iPSC-MLs). All data are presented as mean ± S.E.M and statistical comparisons represent Student’s t-tests (with Welch’s correction where appropriate), unless otherwise stated.

Results: Although isolated RA-iPSC-CMs exhibited an atrial-like phenotype, they responded poorly to SK channel inhibition by UCL1684, with only 17.6% of cells exhibiting ISK (n = 17). Isolated RA-iPSC-CMs exhibited substantial heterogeneity of spontaneous action potential (AP) duration (APD). APD heterogeneity was significantly smaller (p < 0.001; F-test) when spontaneous APs were recorded from in situ RA-iPSC-MLs, demonstrating that maintenance of the monolayer reduces electrophysiological variability.

A method for simultaneous electrical stimulation of iPSC-MLs and whole-cell recording has not previously been published to the best of our knowledge. Accordingly, we have developed a novel method for localized stimulation of iPSC-MLs which allows concurrent whole-cell patch clamp recordings to be made at a user-defined stimulation rate. Using this method >95% of RA-iPSC-MLs and DMSO-iPSC-MLs could be paced at 1 Hz. RA-iPSC-MLs (n = 53) paced at 1 Hz exhibited a more atrial-like phenotype than DMSO-iPSC-MLs (n = 45) as characterised by abbreviated repolarisation at APD30 (40.5 ± 4.0 [RA] vs. 128.8 ± 4.6 ms [DMSO]; p < 0.0001) and APD90 (220.8 ± 13.3 [RA] vs. 283.4 ± 10.2 ms [DMSO]; p < 0.001); and a lower AP and plateau amplitude (101.6 ± 1.6 mV and 82.2 ± 2.8 mV respectively) than DMSO-iPSC-MLs (113.0 ± 2.1 mV and 110.0 ± 2.2 mV; p < 0.0001 for both). Prolongation of APD50 by application of UCL1684 was significantly larger in RA-iPSC-MLs (18.7 ± 3.0%; n = 12) than in DMSO-iPSC-MLs (4.2 ± 2.6%; p < 0.01; n = 12). In contrast to data from isolated RA-iPSC-CMs, 100% of RA-iPSC-MLs responded to SK channel inhibition.

Conclusions: These data demonstrate that RA-iPSC-MLs represent a useful model for the study of ISK. Moreover, this novel method of iPSC-ML stimulation may be of wider value in the study of other ion channels that are inconsistently expressed in isolated iPSC-CMs.



Where applicable, experiments conform with Society ethical requirements.

Site search

Filter

Content Type