Noninvasive Quantification of Contractile Dynamics in Cardiac Cells, Spheroids, and Organs-on-a-Chip Using High-Frequency Ultrasound.
Eric M StrohmNeal I CallaghanYu DingNeda LatifiNaimeh RafatianShunsuke FunakoshiIan FernandesCristine Joelle ReitzMichelle Di PaolaAnthony O GramoliniMilica RadisicGordon KellerMichael C KoliosCraig A SimmonsPublished in: ACS nano (2023)
Cell-based models that mimic in vivo heart physiology are poised to make significant advances in cardiac disease modeling and drug discovery. In these systems, cardiomyocyte (CM) contractility is an important functional metric, but current measurement methods are inaccurate and low-throughput or require complex setups. To address this need, we developed a standalone noninvasive, label-free ultrasound technique operating at 40-200 MHz to measure the contractile kinetics of cardiac models, ranging from single adult CMs to 3D microtissue constructs in standard cell culture formats. The high temporal resolution of 1000 fps resolved the beat profile of single mouse CMs paced at up to 9 Hz, revealing limitations of lower speed optical based measurements to resolve beat kinetics or characterize aberrant beats. Coupling of ultrasound with traction force microscopy enabled the measurement of the CM longitudinal modulus and facile estimation of adult mouse CM contractile forces of 2.34 ± 1.40 μN, comparable to more complex measurement techniques. Similarly, the beat rate, rhythm, and drug responses of CM spheroid and microtissue models were measured, including in configurations without optical access. In conclusion, ultrasound can be used for the rapid characterization of CM contractile function in a wide range of commonly studied configurations ranging from single cells to 3D tissue constructs using standard well plates and custom microdevices, with applications in cardiac drug discovery and cardiotoxicity evaluation.
Keyphrases
- drug discovery
- high frequency
- skeletal muscle
- magnetic resonance imaging
- induced apoptosis
- label free
- left ventricular
- smooth muscle
- heart rate
- high resolution
- single molecule
- cell cycle arrest
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- contrast enhanced ultrasound
- heart failure
- ultrasound guided
- blood pressure
- high throughput
- emergency department
- optical coherence tomography
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- bone marrow
- computed tomography
- highly efficient
- cell proliferation
- sensitive detection
- pi k akt
- young adults