In vitro cardiac microphysiological models are highly reliable for scientific research, drug development, and medical applications. Although widely accepted by the scientific community, these systems are still limited in longevity due to the absence of non-invasive stimulation techniques. Phototransducers provide an efficient stimulation method, offering a wireless approach with high temporal and spatial resolution while minimizing invasiveness in stimulation processes. In this manuscript, we present a fully optical method for stimulating and detecting the activity of an in vitro cardiac microphysiological model. Specifically, we fabricated engineered laminar anisotropic tissues by seeding human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) generated in a 3D bioreactor suspension culture. We employed a phototransducer, an amphiphilic azobenzene derivative, named Ziapin2, for stimulation and a Ca2+ dye (X-Rhod 1) for monitoring the system's response. The results demonstrate that Ziapin2 can photomodulate Ca2+ responses in the employed system without compromising tissue integrity, viability, or behavior. Furthermore, we showed that the light-based stimulation approach offers a similar resolution compared to electrical stimulation, the current gold standard. Overall, this protocol opens promising perspectives for the application of Ziapin2 and material-based photostimulation in cardiac research.

Florindi, C., Jang, Y., Shani, K., Moretti, P., Bertarelli, C., Lanzani, G., et al. (2025). A Cardiac Microphysiological System for Studying Ca2+ Propagation via Non-genetic Optical Stimulation. JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2025-(217) [10.3791/67823].

A Cardiac Microphysiological System for Studying Ca2+ Propagation via Non-genetic Optical Stimulation

Florindi, C
Co-primo
;
Lodola, F
Co-ultimo
;
2025

Abstract

In vitro cardiac microphysiological models are highly reliable for scientific research, drug development, and medical applications. Although widely accepted by the scientific community, these systems are still limited in longevity due to the absence of non-invasive stimulation techniques. Phototransducers provide an efficient stimulation method, offering a wireless approach with high temporal and spatial resolution while minimizing invasiveness in stimulation processes. In this manuscript, we present a fully optical method for stimulating and detecting the activity of an in vitro cardiac microphysiological model. Specifically, we fabricated engineered laminar anisotropic tissues by seeding human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) generated in a 3D bioreactor suspension culture. We employed a phototransducer, an amphiphilic azobenzene derivative, named Ziapin2, for stimulation and a Ca2+ dye (X-Rhod 1) for monitoring the system's response. The results demonstrate that Ziapin2 can photomodulate Ca2+ responses in the employed system without compromising tissue integrity, viability, or behavior. Furthermore, we showed that the light-based stimulation approach offers a similar resolution compared to electrical stimulation, the current gold standard. Overall, this protocol opens promising perspectives for the application of Ziapin2 and material-based photostimulation in cardiac research.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
cardiac microphysiological models, light stimulation, photoswitches
English
21-mar-2025
2025
2025-
217
e67823
none
Florindi, C., Jang, Y., Shani, K., Moretti, P., Bertarelli, C., Lanzani, G., et al. (2025). A Cardiac Microphysiological System for Studying Ca2+ Propagation via Non-genetic Optical Stimulation. JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2025-(217) [10.3791/67823].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/550683
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