Spontaneous electrical activity of patient-specific cardiomyocytes with a variant in the RYR2 gene recorded by multielectrode array technique

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Authors

KRÁL Martin ŠVECOVÁ Olga ZELENÁK Štefan PACHERNÍK Jiří BÁRTA Tomáš ZÍDKOVÁ Jana SYNKOVÁ Iva LIETAVA Samuel NOVOTNÝ Tomáš BÉBAROVÁ Markéta

Year of publication 2024
Type Conference abstract
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Description Background: Y4734C variant in the ryanodine receptor type 2 (RYR2) was found in a patient with idiopathic ventricular fibrillation and his sister who was diagnosed with catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). The variant hasn´t been functionally tested before. To reveal the proarrhythmic potential of the variant, cardiomyocytes derived from human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-CM) of the proband (IF), his sister (CPVT), and his healthy nephew as control (WT) were prepared. Here we bring data showing the spontaneous electrical activity of the hiPSC-CM and its changes under ß-adrenergic stimulation. Methods: The spontaneous electrical activity of hiPSC-CM in control conditions (CC) and under the effect of 0.5µM isoprenaline (ISO) stimulating ß-adrenergic receptors was recorded by the multielectrode array technique at 37?C. The cycle length (CL) and field potential duration (FPD) were evaluated; Bazett´s formula was used to correct FPD (FPDc). The short-term variability of CL (STVCL) was calculated using Origin2024 software. The data are presented as the median±interquartile range of n samples (nWT=11; nIF=19; nCPVT=18), and non-parametric tests (Wilcoxon and Kruskal-Wallis) were used due to non-normal data distribution; P?0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: CL was significantly shorter in WT (0.71±0.29s) than in CPVT (1.40±0.81s); IF did not differ from both (1.10±1.23s). There was no difference between WT, IF, and CPVT in FPD (152.1±106.3, 148.5±75.9, and 128.0±46.0ms, respectively), however, FPDc was significantly longer in WT (179.1±139.1ms) than in CPVT (94.4±41.7ms). After adding ISO, CL and FPD were significantly shortened in all groups (WT CLISO=0.62±0.20s, FPDISO=135.2±58.3ms; IF CLISO=0.67±0.84s, FPDISO=118.7±71.8ms; CPVT CLISO=1.12±0.80s, FPDISO=104.4±25.7ms); no significant changes were observed in FPDc. The CPVT showed significantly larger shortening in CL than WT and IF (by 38.7±21.6, 13.8±23.3, and 25.7±28.5%, respectively) whereas no differences were apparent in FPD shortening. IF and CPVT showed significantly larger STVCL than WT in CC (18.3±45.1, 34.0±42.6, and 3.9±13.2ms, respectively). ISO significantly decreased STVCL in both IF and CPVT (9.0±27.8 and 8.5±7.8ms, respectively) but had no significant effect on WT (8.1±42.7ms). Conclusions: CPVT showed a slower beating rate than WT and higher reactivity to ISO than WT and IF. ISO increased beating frequency and shortened FPD in every group. IF and CPVT had higher beat-to-beat variability of CL than WT in CC, but no difference among groups was apparent under ISO.
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