Neurocardiac interactions using hiPSC derived cardiomyocytes and sympathetic neurones from CPVT patients

Cross-Talk of Cells in the Heart 2025 (University of Birmingham, UK) (2025) Proc Physiol Soc 66, C06

Oral Communications: Neurocardiac interactions using hiPSC derived cardiomyocytes and sympathetic neurones from CPVT patients

Yoon Young Choi1, Ni Li1, Dan Li 1, David J. Paterson1

1Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford United Kingdom

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Background: Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia (CPVT) is a rare but life-threatening inherited arrhythmic disorder, typically triggered by exercise or emotional stress, and a leading cause of sudden cardiac death in the young. CPVT is commonly caused by mutations in calcium-handling components of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), which promote diastolic calcium leakage and increase arrhythmogenic risk under adrenergic stress. Current therapies such as β-blockers and, in more severe cases, cardiac sympathetic denervation, remain insufficient in a significant subset of patients – suggesting a more complex pathophysiological mechanism. Although previous studies have characterised CPVT phenotypes in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs), the contribution of diseased sympathetic neurones (SNs) to the CPVT phenotype remains poorly understood.

Method: hiPSCs derived from both a CPVT patient and a healthy control were differentiated into cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) and sympathetic neurones (hiPSC-SNs). Electrophysiological activity was assessed using multi-electrode array (MEA) recordings. Calcium transients were measured using Fura-2AM indicator. Real time cAMP dynamics were monitored using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) based biosensor (Epac-SH187). All hiPSC lines used in this study were ethically approved and obtained from established sources with appropriate donor consent.

Results: To characterise features of baseline cardiac action potential, MEA measurements were conducted. At baseline, 47% (8 out of 17) of CPVT hiPSC-CMs exhibited spontaneous arrhythmic activity, including tachycardia and re-entry phenomena, compared to none in controls (n=8). Among regularly beating cells, CPVT hiPSC-CMs showed significantly shorter RR intervals (control: 0.5638±0.049s, n=8; vs CPVT: 0.4412±0.025s, n=8; unpaired t-test; p<0.05) and field potential durations (control: 0.3406±0.041s, n=8; vs CPVT: 0.1844±0.015s, n=8; unpaired t-test; p<0.01). Application of isoprenaline (β-adrenergic stimulation) shortened RR interval in both groups. Arrhythmias were triggered in some CPVT cardiomyocytes (regular at baseline), but not in controls. Calcium imaging revealed greater isoprenaline-induced calcium transients in CPVT hiPSC-CM (Control: 0.05±0.01, n=11; vs CPVT: 0.99±0.13, n=14; unpaired t-test, p<0.05). Spontaneous calcium discharges were detected in 77.4% (24 out of 31) of CPVT compared to 10% (1 out of 10) of controls. FRET analysis showed significantly elevated cAMP responses in CPVT hiPSC-CM following isoprenaline stimulation (control: 48.63±1.625%, n=98; vs CPVT: 64.25±1.990%, n=70; Mann-Whitney test; p<0.0001). For hiPSC-SN, CPVT displayed enhanced calcium transients and elevated cAMP elevation following nicotine stimulation, compared to isogenic controls. In hiPSC neurocardiac co-culture, nicotine stimulation increased the beating rate of cardiomyocytes, confirming functional connectivity. The reduction in RR interval was significantly greater in control cardiomyocytes co-cultured with CPVT neurones (n=5) than with control neurones (n=4, Mann-Whitney test; p<0.05).  Calcium imaging showed that CPVT hiPSC-SN consistently exhibited elevated calcium transients, regardless of cardiomyocyte genotype they were paired with. This indicates that hyperactivity of neurones is intrinsic and not modulated by co-cultured cardiomyocytes.

Conclusion: Our investigation confirms hallmark CPVT abnormalities in hiPSC-CMs, including arrhythmia, calcium dysregulation and altered β-adrenergic cAMP signalling. Additionally, our results suggest a novel pathogenic role for CPVT sympathetic neurones, whose intrinsic hyperactivity exacerbates the cardiomyocyte phenotype via neurocardiac cross-talk. These findings provide new insights into the pathophysiology of CPVT and highlight the potential of targeting sympathetic excitability as a therapeutic strategy for personalised treatments.



Where applicable, experiments conform with Society ethical requirements.

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