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Self-assembling human heart organoids for the modeling of cardiac development and congenital heart disease

Authors :
Yonatan Lewis-Israeli
Aaron Wasserman
Mitchell Gabalski
Kristen Ball
Brett Volmert
Weiyang Yang
Bo Li
Jinyun Zou
Guangming Ni
Natalia Pajares
Xanthippi Chatzistavrou
Chao Zhou
Zhen Qiu
Wen Li
Aitor Aguirre
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Congenital heart defects (CHD) constitute the most common birth defect in humans, affecting approximately 1% of all live births. Our ability to understand how these disorders originate is hindered by our limited ability to model the complexity of the human heart in vitro. There is a pressing need to develop more faithful organ-like platforms recapitulating complex in vivo phenotypes to study human development and disease in vitro. Here we report a novel method to generate human heart organoids by self-assembly using pluripotent stem cells. Our method is fully defined, highly efficient, scalable, shows high reproducibility and is compatible with screening and high-throughput approaches. Human heart organoids (hHOs) are generated using a two-step canonical Wnt signaling modulation strategy using a combination of chemical inhibitors and growth factors in completely defined culture conditions. hHOs faithfully recapitulate human cardiac development and are similar to age-matched fetal cardiac tissues at the transcriptomic, structural and cellular level. hHOs develop sophisticated internal chambers with well-organized multi-lineage cell-type regional identities reminiscent of the heart fields and the atrial and ventricular chambers, as well as the epicardium, endocardium, and coronary vasculature, and exhibit functional activity. We also show that hHOs can recreate complex metabolic disorders associated with CHD by establishing the first in vitro human model of diabetes during pregnancy (DDP) to study embryonic CHD. morphological and metabolically effects of increased glucose and insulin, showing the capability of modeling the effects of diabetes during pregnancy (DDP). Our heart organoid model constitutes a powerful novel tool for translational studies in human cardiac development and disease.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........91331682e422459e6e6ffcdacc0a8dca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-132349/v1