Endothelial extracellular vesicles enhance vascular self-assembly in engineered human cardiac tissues

Karl T. Wagner(Canada Research Chairs), Rick Xing Ze Lu(Canada Research Chairs), Shira Landau(Canada Research Chairs), Sarah A. Shawky(University of Toronto), Yimu Zhao(University of Toronto), David F. Bodenstein(University Health Network), Luis Felipe Jiménez Vargas(Canada Research Chairs), Richard Jiang(Canada Research Chairs), Sargol Okhovatian(University Health Network), Ying Wang(Canada Research Chairs), Chuan Liu(Canada Research Chairs), Daniel Vosoughi(University Health Network), Dakota Gustafson(University Health Network), Jason E. Fish(University Health Network), Carolyn L. Cummins(University of Toronto), Milica Radisic(University Health Network)
Biofabrication
September 3, 2024
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

The fabrication of complex and stable vasculature in engineered cardiac tissues represents a significant hurdle towards building physiologically relevant models of the heart. Here, we implemented a 3D model of cardiac vasculogenesis, incorporating endothelial cells (EC), stromal cells, and human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived cardiomyocytes (CM) in a fibrin hydrogel. The presence of CMs disrupted vessel formation in 3D tissues, resulting in the upregulation of endothelial activation markers and altered extracellular vesicle (EV) signaling in engineered tissues as determined by the proteomic analysis of culture supernatant. miRNA sequencing of CM- and EC-secreted EVs highlighted key EV-miRNAs that were postulated to play differing roles in cardiac vasculogenesis, including the let-7 family and miR-126-3p in EC-EVs. In the absence of CMs, the supplementation of CM-EVs to EC monolayers attenuated EC migration and proliferation and resulted in shorter and more discontinuous self-assembling vessels when applied to 3D vascular tissues. In contrast, supplementation of EC-EVs to the tissue culture media of 3D vascularized cardiac tissues mitigated some of the deleterious effects of CMs on vascular self-assembly, enhancing the average length and continuity of vessel tubes that formed in the presence of CMs. Direct transfection validated the effects of the key EC-EV miRNAs let-7b-5p and miR-126-3p in improving the maintenance of continuous vascular networks. EC-EV supplementation to biofabricated cardiac tissues and microfluidic devices resulted in tissue vascularization, illustrating the use of this approach in the engineering of enhanced, perfusable, microfluidic models of the myocardium.


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