1 research outputs found
Silicon Nanowire-Induced Maturation of Cardiomyocytes Derived from Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
The current inability to derive mature
cardiomyocytes from human pluripotent stem cells has been the limiting
step for transitioning this powerful technology into clinical therapies.
To address this, scaffold-based tissue engineering approaches have
been utilized to mimic heart development in vitro and promote maturation
of cardiomyocytes derived from human pluripotent stem cells. While
scaffolds can provide 3D microenvironments, current scaffolds lack
the matched physical/chemical/biological properties of native extracellular
environments. On the other hand, scaffold-free, 3D cardiac spheroids
(i.e., spherical-shaped microtissues) prepared by seeding cardiomyocytes
into agarose microwells were shown to improve cardiac functions. However,
cardiomyocytes within the spheroids could not assemble in a controlled
manner and led to compromised, unsynchronized contractions. Here,
we show, for the first time, that incorporation of a trace amount
(i.e., ∼0.004% w/v) of electrically conductive silicon nanowires
(e-SiNWs) in otherwise scaffold-free cardiac spheroids can form an
electrically conductive network, leading to synchronized and significantly
enhanced contraction (i.e., >55% increase in average contraction
amplitude), resulting in significantly more advanced cellular structural
and contractile maturation