| Literature DB >> 31447679 |
Brian D Guth1,2, Michael Engwall3, Sandy Eldridge4, C Michael Foley5, Liang Guo6, Gary Gintant5, John Koerner7, Stanley T Parish8, Jennifer B Pierson8, Alexandre J S Ribeiro9, Tanja Zabka10, Khuram W Chaudhary11, Yasunari Kanda12, Brian Berridge13.
Abstract
Drug-induced effects on cardiac contractility can be assessed through the measurement of the maximal rate of pressure increase in the left ventricle (LVdP/dtmax) in conscious animals, and such studies are often conducted at the late stage of preclinical drug development. Detection of such effects earlier in drug research using simpler, in vitro test systems would be a valuable addition to our strategies for identifying the best possible drug development candidates. Thus, testing platforms with reasonably high throughput, and affordable costs would be helpful for early screening purposes. There may also be utility for testing platforms that provide mechanistic information about how a given drug affects cardiac contractility. Finally, there could be in vitro testing platforms that could ultimately contribute to the regulatory safety package of a new drug. The characteristics needed for a successful cell or tissue-based testing platform for cardiac contractility will be dictated by its intended use. In this article, general considerations are presented with the intent of guiding the development of new testing platforms that will find utility in drug research and development. In the following article (part 2), specific aspects of using human-induced stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes for this purpose are addressed.Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyocyte; contractility; inotropic state; myocardium; stem cells
Year: 2019 PMID: 31447679 PMCID: PMC6697071 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the elements playing a role in the contractile process and therefore being potential targets for drug-induced effects on myocardial contractility. From Eisner et al. (2017) with permission. NCX, sodium-calcium exchanger; PMCA, plasma membrane calcium ATPase; RyR, ryanodine receptor; MCU, mitochondrial calcium uniporter; NCLX, mitochondrial sodium-calcium exchanger.
List of compounds or interventions that would be useful in profiling the performance of a novel in vitro testing system due to the involvement of various inotropic mechanisms.
| Intervention | Mode of action | Acute inotropic effect | Dose range | Note | References of studies with human myocardia or stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stretch | Frank–Starling Law of Heart | Positive | Stepwise (∼50 µm/step) | Until a plateau is achieved | ( |
| Pacing | Force-frequency relationship | Positive | 0.5–6 Hz | Until a plateau is achieved | ( |
| Extracellular [Ca2+] | Excitation-contraction coupler | Positive | 0.1 to 5 mM | Until a plateau is achieved | ( |
| Hypoxia | ATP depletion | Negative | ≤1% O2 up to 12 h | HIF-1α* and cell injury markers | ( |
| Isoprenaline | β-Adrenergic agonist | Positive | 0.001–1 µM | ( | |
| Norepinephrine | α-Adrenergic agonist | Positive | 0.001 to 10 µM | Negative (chronic effect) | ( |
| Carbachol | Cholinergic agonist | Negative | 1, 10 µM | Following β-adrenergic activation | ( |
| Digoxin | Na+/K+-ATPase inhibitor | Positive | 0.001–2 µM | ( | |
| Uabain | Na+/K+-ATPase inhibitor | Positive | 0.03–3 µM | ( | |
| Bay K-8644 | L-Ca2+ channel opener | Positive | 0.01–0.3 µM | ( | |
| Nifedipine | L-Ca2+ channel blocker | Negative | 0.003–3 µM | ( | |
| Verapamil | L-Ca2+/hERG channel blocker | Negative | 0.03–0.3 µM | ( | |
| Caffeine | RyR2 activator | Positive | 100–10,000 µM | ( | |
| Ryanodine | RyR2 inhibitor | Negative | 0.1–10 µM | ( | |
| Thapsigargin | SERCA2a inhibitor | Negative | 0.01–1 µM | ( | |
| EMD-57033 | Myosin ATPase activator | Positive | 0.1–10 µM | ( | |
| Blebbistatin | Myosin II ATPase inhibitor | Negative | 0.001–1 µM | ( | |
| Milrinone | PDE inhibitor | Positive | 0.03–300 µM | ( | |
| Forskolin | Adenylyl cyclase activator | Positive | 0.3–10 µM | More effective on failing hearts | ( |
| dB-cAMP | Member permeable cAMP | Positive | 30–3,000 µM | More effective on failing hearts | ( |
| Histamine | H-receptor agonist | Positive | 0.3–100 uM | ( | |
| Angiotensin II | Ang II-receptor agonist | Positive | 0.001–0.5 µM | Negative (chronic effect) | ( |
| Endothelin-1 | ET-1 receptor agonist | Positive | 0.0003–0.1 µM | Negative (chronic effect) | ( |
| SEA0400 | NCX inhibitor | Positive | 0.01–1 µM | ( |
Figure 2A schematic overview of endpoints proposed to use at different phases of drug discovery and development, along with the required throughput and associated cost. The primary endpoint refers to functional measurements to quantify contractile force generation indirectly with a surrogate (often employing optical technique to detect shortening—namely, isotonic contraction of cardiomyocytes beating freely without a load) or directly in the presence of both pre- and after-loads. The secondary endpoint is used to detect cell injury, potentials, or underlying mechanisms for long-term modeling. SAR, structure-activity relationship; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; cTnT/cTnI, cardiac troponin T/I; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) dUTP nick-end labeling; γH2AX, gamma H2A histone family member X; ROS, reactive oxygen species; BNP, B-type natriuretic peptide; ANP, atrial natriuretic peptide; NT-proBNP or proANP, N-terminal pro B-type or atrial natriuretic peptide; α-/β-MHC, alpha- or beta-myosin heavy chain; SERCA2a, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase; AMPK, 5’AMP-activated protein kinase; MAPKs, mitogen-activated protein kinase; PKC, protein kinase C.
Comparison between primary human ventricular cardiomyocytes and ihPSC-derived cardiomyocytes.
| Characteristic | Primary cardiomyocyte | hiPSC cardiomyocyte | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Morphology | Shape | Rod | Round |
| Nucleation | Mostly tetraploidy | No polyploidism | |
| Alignment | Longitudinal | None | |
| Myofibril orientation | Longitudinal | None | |
| Sarcomere banding | Z, I, A, H, and M bands | Z and I bands only | |
| T-tubule | Present with Z-disks | Not present | |
| Contractility | Adrenoreceptors | ß1-dependent | ß2-dependent |
| Contractile proteins | TNNI1, MYH6, MLC2a, N2B | TNNI3, MYH7, MLC2v, N2BA | |
| Contractile force | 10–50 mN/mm2 | 0.1–0.5 mN/mm2 | |
| Sarcoplasmic reticulum | Well developed; | Low expression of | |
| High expression of RYR2 and SERCA2a | RYR2 and SERCA2a | ||
| Metabolism | Substrate | Fatty acid | Glucose and lactate |
| Mitochondria | High numbers | Low numbers |
Adapted from Tan and Ye. J. of Cardiovasc. Trans. Res (2018) 11:375–392 (Tan and Ye, 2018).