Structural and functional adaptations of human cardiomyocytes in metabolic disease and heart failure.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Judith Huettemeister, Markus Bögner, Dirk Eggert-Doktor, Emanuel Heil, Uwe Primessnig, Sophie C Reimers, Marzena Kirk, Girish Ramesh, Timo Zadegh Nazari-Shafti, Herko Grubitzsch, Simon Sündermann, Christoph Knosalla, Kun Zhang, Volkmar Falk, Frank R Heinzel, Felix Hohendanner
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Abstract

Heart failure (HF), obesity, and diabetes are associated with structural and functional changes that affect the heart at both the organ and cellular levels. Studying isolated adult single cardiomyocytes provides valuable mechanistic insights. However, isolating single cardiomyocytes from human tissue is particularly challenging. This study presents an optimized multiple-step digestion protocol to isolate viable cardiomyocytes from atrial and ventricular human tissue obtained perioperatively or through myocardial biopsies. Using this method and resource, we analyzed calcium-signaling during excitation-contraction coupling and structural features such as t-tubules and mitochondria using confocal microscopy in patients with or without HF, obesity, or diabetes. In a subset of patients undergoing open heart surgery, tissue samples and serum from the great cardiac vein were obtained either under control conditions or upon cardiac volume challenge (VC). We isolated viable cells and observed distinct structural differences between atrial and ventricular cardiomyocytes, including variations in t-tubular and cell size. In atrial cardiomyocytes, when comparing control with patients with HF, the t-tubular networks were unchanged. However, patients with obesity exhibited significantly more t-tubules associated with larger cell sizes. Furthermore, mitochondrial density appeared higher in patients with overweight and diabetes, suggesting that the metabolic status influences cardiomyocyte structure. Finally, when exposing isolated cardiomyocytes with VC serum from the respective patients, excitation-contraction coupling was markedly enhanced, indicating a distention-related alteration of the cardiac secretome with immediate effects on cardiomyocytes. In summary, an optimized protocol for isolating human cardiomyocytes confirmed structural features, identified disease-related changes, and allowed studying the dynamic impact of cardiac distention on secretome-related cardiomyocyte function.NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study presents a novel protocol for isolating human cardiomyocytes, uncovering atrial-ventricular structural differences, obesity-related increases in t-tubules and mitochondria, and metabolic influences on cell architecture. It highlights the dynamic effects of cardiac volume challenge on excitation-contraction coupling through secretome alterations. These advancements provide insights into how conditions like obesity and diabetes reshape cardiomyocyte structure and function, advancing our understanding of heart disease mechanisms.

代谢疾病和心力衰竭中人类心肌细胞的结构和功能适应。
心力衰竭(HF)、肥胖和糖尿病与影响心脏器官和细胞水平的结构和功能变化有关。研究分离的成人单个心肌细胞提供了有价值的机制见解。然而,从人体组织中分离单个心肌细胞尤其具有挑战性。本研究提出了一种优化的多步骤消化方案,从围手术期或通过心肌活检获得的心房和心室人体组织中分离出有活力的心肌细胞。利用这种方法和资源,我们使用共聚焦显微镜分析了有或无HF、肥胖或糖尿病患者兴奋-收缩耦合过程中的钙信号和结构特征,如t小管和线粒体。在一部分接受心脏直视手术的患者中,在控制条件下或在心脏容量挑战(VC)条件下获得心脏大静脉的组织样本和血清。我们分离了活细胞,观察到心房和心室心肌细胞的结构差异,包括t管细胞和细胞大小的差异。在心房心肌细胞中,当与HF患者进行对照时,t管网络没有改变。然而,肥胖患者明显表现出更多的t小管和更大的细胞大小。此外,超重和糖尿病患者的线粒体密度更高,表明代谢状态影响心肌细胞结构。最后,当将分离的心肌细胞与来自各自患者的VC血清暴露时,兴奋-收缩偶联显着增强,表明心脏分泌组的扩张相关改变对心肌细胞有直接影响。综上所述,一种优化的分离人心肌细胞的方案确认了结构特征,识别了疾病相关的变化,并允许研究心脏扩张对分泌组相关心肌细胞功能的动态影响。这项研究提出了一种分离人类心肌细胞的新方案,揭示了房室结构差异,肥胖相关的t小管和线粒体增加,以及代谢对细胞结构的影响。它强调了心脏容量挑战通过分泌组改变对兴奋-收缩耦合的动态影响。这些进展为肥胖和糖尿病等疾病如何重塑心肌细胞结构和功能提供了见解,促进了我们对心脏病机制的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
10.40%
发文量
202
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology publishes original investigations, reviews and perspectives on the physiology of the heart, vasculature, and lymphatics. These articles include experimental and theoretical studies of cardiovascular function at all levels of organization ranging from the intact and integrative animal and organ function to the cellular, subcellular, and molecular levels. The journal embraces new descriptions of these functions and their control systems, as well as their basis in biochemistry, biophysics, genetics, and cell biology. Preference is given to research that provides significant new mechanistic physiological insights that determine the performance of the normal and abnormal heart and circulation.
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