External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.

Induced pluripotent stem cell colonies have the capability of differentiating into beating clusters of embryoid bodies (EBs). Being patient-derived, these represent a source of autologous cardiomyocytes for cardiac cell therapy. However, limited clinical success has been achieved due to 1) low cardi...

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Main Author: Muhammad Parasuram.
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49481
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-494812023-02-28T18:04:41Z External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies. Muhammad Parasuram. School of Biological Sciences National Heart Centre Singapore Winston Shim DRNTU::Science Induced pluripotent stem cell colonies have the capability of differentiating into beating clusters of embryoid bodies (EBs). Being patient-derived, these represent a source of autologous cardiomyocytes for cardiac cell therapy. However, limited clinical success has been achieved due to 1) low cardiomyogenic efficiency; 2) sub-physiological contraction rates; and 3) unsynchronized contractions among beating clusters. To address these issues, the effects of external electrical stimulation on cardiomyogenic efficiency and contracting behaviors of EBs were studied. Electrical stimulation has been shown to be implicated in embryonic cardiomyogenesis, and hence was applied to developing EBs. Results show that cardiomyogenesis in developing EBs was not enhanced with electrical stimulation. On the other hand, developed embryoid bodies with spontaneous contractions displayed very good response to external electrical stimulation at optimized parameters. It was shown that beating clusters with low contraction rates (0.1 Hz) could be electrically stimulated and trained to contract at near-physiological rates (0.75 Hz). Importantly, unsynchronized beating clusters could be trained by prolonged and stepwise electrical stimulation into rhythmic synchrony for extended periods of up to six hours before contraction rates decreased. Taken together, these results imply that optimized electrical stimulation can generate homogenously contracting EBs for the application in cardiac cell therapy. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences 2012-05-21T01:59:02Z 2012-05-21T01:59:02Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49481 en Nanyang Technological University 29 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Muhammad Parasuram.
External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
description Induced pluripotent stem cell colonies have the capability of differentiating into beating clusters of embryoid bodies (EBs). Being patient-derived, these represent a source of autologous cardiomyocytes for cardiac cell therapy. However, limited clinical success has been achieved due to 1) low cardiomyogenic efficiency; 2) sub-physiological contraction rates; and 3) unsynchronized contractions among beating clusters. To address these issues, the effects of external electrical stimulation on cardiomyogenic efficiency and contracting behaviors of EBs were studied. Electrical stimulation has been shown to be implicated in embryonic cardiomyogenesis, and hence was applied to developing EBs. Results show that cardiomyogenesis in developing EBs was not enhanced with electrical stimulation. On the other hand, developed embryoid bodies with spontaneous contractions displayed very good response to external electrical stimulation at optimized parameters. It was shown that beating clusters with low contraction rates (0.1 Hz) could be electrically stimulated and trained to contract at near-physiological rates (0.75 Hz). Importantly, unsynchronized beating clusters could be trained by prolonged and stepwise electrical stimulation into rhythmic synchrony for extended periods of up to six hours before contraction rates decreased. Taken together, these results imply that optimized electrical stimulation can generate homogenously contracting EBs for the application in cardiac cell therapy.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Muhammad Parasuram.
format Final Year Project
author Muhammad Parasuram.
author_sort Muhammad Parasuram.
title External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
title_short External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
title_full External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
title_fullStr External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
title_full_unstemmed External electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
title_sort external electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes to achieve synchrony at physiological frequencies.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49481
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