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Geometric Control of Cardiomyogenic Induction from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

Pluripotent stem cells provide the opportunity to study human cardiogenesis in vitro, and are a renewable source of tissue for drug testing and disease models, including replacement cardiomyocytes that may be a useful treatment for heart failure. Typically, differentiation is initiated by forming spherical cell aggregates wherein an extraembryonic endoderm (ExE) layer develops on the surface. Given that interactions between endoderm and mesoderm influence embryonic cardiogenesis, we examined the impact of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) aggregate size on endoderm and cardiac development. We first demonstrated aggregate size control by micropatterning hESC colonies at defined diameters and transferring the colonies to suspension. The ratio of endoderm (GATA-6) to neural (PAX6) gene and protein expression increased with decreasing colony size. Subsequently, maximum mesoderm and cardiac induction occurred in larger aggregates when initiated with endoderm-biased hESCs (high GATA-6:PAX6), and in smaller aggregates when initiated with neural-biased hESCs (low GATA-6:PAX6). Additionally, incorporating micropatterned aggregates in a stirred suspension bioreactor increased cell yields and contracting aggregate frequency. We next interrogated the relationship between aggregate size and endoderm and cardiac differentiation efficiency in size-controlled aggregates, generated using forced aggregation, in defined cardiogenic medium. An inverse relationship between endoderm cell frequency (FoxA2+ and GATA6+) and aggregate size was observed, and cardiogenesis was maximized in mid-size aggregates (1000 cells) based on frequency of cardiac progenitors (~50% KDRlow/C-KITneg) on day 5 and cardiomyocytes (~24% cTnT+) on day 16. To elucidate a relationship between endoderm frequency and cardiac differentiation efficiency, aggregates were initiated with varying frequencies of ExE progenitors (SOX7-overexpressing hESCs). Maximum cardiomyocyte frequencies (~27%) occurred in aggregates formed with 10 to 25% ExE progenitors. These findings suggest a geometric relationship between aggregate size and ExE differentiation efficiency subsequently impacts cardiomyocyte yield, elucidating a mechanism for endogenous control of cell fate through cell-cell interactions in the aggregate.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:OTU.1807/33799
Date05 December 2012
CreatorsBauwens, Celine
ContributorsZandstra, Peter W.
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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