Multi-chamber cardioids unravel human heart development and cardiac defects

Clara Schmidt(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Alison Deyett(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Tobias Ilmer(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Simon Haendeler(Max Perutz Labs), Aranxa Torres Caballero(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Maria Novatchkova(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Michael A. Netzer(University of Vienna), Lavinia Ceci Ginistrelli(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Estela Mancheño Juncosa(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), T. K. Bhattacharya(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Amra Mujadzic(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Lokesh G. Pimpale, Stefan M. Jahnel(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Martina Cirigliano(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Daniel Reumann(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Katherina Tavernini(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Nóra Pápai(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Steffen Hering(University of Vienna), Pablo Hofbauer, Sasha Mendjan(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology)
Cell
November 28, 2023
Cited by 161Open Access
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Abstract

The number one cause of human fetal death are defects in heart development. Because the human embryonic heart is inaccessible and the impacts of mutations, drugs, and environmental factors on the specialized functions of different heart compartments are not captured by in vitro models, determining the underlying causes is difficult. Here, we established a human cardioid platform that recapitulates the development of all major embryonic heart compartments, including right and left ventricles, atria, outflow tract, and atrioventricular canal. By leveraging 2D and 3D differentiation, we efficiently generated progenitor subsets with distinct first, anterior, and posterior second heart field identities. This advance enabled the reproducible generation of cardioids with compartment-specific in vivo-like gene expression profiles, morphologies, and functions. We used this platform to unravel the ontogeny of signal and contraction propagation between interacting heart chambers and dissect how mutations, teratogens, and drugs cause compartment-specific defects in the developing human heart.


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