| Literature DB >> 23766769 |
Martin Müller1, Thomas Seufferlein, Anett Illing, Jörg Homann.
Abstract
The generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells) has pioneered the field of regenerative medicine and developmental biology. They can be generated by overexpression of a defined set of transcription factors in somatic cells derived from easily accessible tissues such as skin or plucked hair or even human urine. In case of applying this tool to patients who are classified into a disease group, it enables the generation of a disease- and patient-specific research platform. iPS cells have proven a significant tool to elucidate pathophysiological mechanisms in various diseases such as diabetes, blood disorders, defined neurological disorders, and genetic liver disease. One of the first successfully modelled human diseases was long QT syndrome, an inherited cardiac channelopathy which causes potentially fatal cardiac arrhythmia. This review summarizes the efforts of reprogramming various types of long QT syndrome and discusses the potential underlying mechanisms and their application.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23766769 PMCID: PMC3666272 DOI: 10.1155/2013/496501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Schematic delineation of the cardiac action potential—resting “4,” upstroke “0,” early repolarization “1,” plateau “2,” and final repolarization “3.” Inward currents: I Na and I Ca. Delayed rectifier currents: I Kr, I Ks. Inward rectifier currents: I K1, I Kach. Adapted from [3]: (a) normal cardiac action potential. Different currents are allocated to their chronology in the AP course. Ion channel genes are written semitransparent. (b) Different LQTSs are shown in relation to their distinct ion current causative for the indicated syndrome. Overactivation/reduction of different currents leads to a significant elongation of the action potential.
Current iPS cell-based models for long QT syndromes.
| LQTS subtype | Gene mutation | Protein | iPSC-C model |
|---|---|---|---|
| LQTS1 | KCNQ1 | Alpha-subunit of the delayed rectifier (slow) potassium channel ( | Moretti et al., 2010 [ |
| LQTS2 | HERG | Alpha-subunit of the delayed rectifier (rapid) potassium channel ( | Itzhaki et al., 2011 [ |
| LQTS3 | SNC5A | Alpha-subunit of the cardiac sodium channel | Malan et al., 2011 [ |
| LQTS8 | CACNA1c | Alpha-1c-subunit of the L-type calcium channel | Yazawa et al., 2011 [ |
Figure 2(a) Schematic presentation of iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes' retrieval. Based on easy accessible donor cells, like, for example, fibroblasts and consequent overexpression of different pluripotency factors, reprogrammed donor cells fall into a state of pluripotency (iPS-Cells). By various forms of directed cardiac differentiation, cardiomyocyte-like cells show essential characteristics of adult cardiomyocytes, maintaining their LQT-/non-LQT-phenotype. (b) Possible applications for iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes: (i) disease modelling for better understanding of genetic and epigenetic causation of LQTS; (ii) large-scale drug screening for both patient-specific and nonspecific pharmacotherapy; (iii) circumventing transplantation-associated immunogenicity by patient-specific cell therapy.