scholarly journals A model-guided pipeline for drug cardiotoxicity screening with human stem-cell derived cardiomyocytes

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander P. Clark ◽  
Siyu Wei ◽  
Trine Krogh-Madsen ◽  
David J. Christini

ABSTRACTNew therapeutic compounds go through a preclinical drug cardiotoxicity screening process that is overly conservative and provides limited mechanistic insight, leading to the misclassification of potentially beneficial drugs as proarrhythmic. There is a need to develop a screening paradigm that maintains this high sensitivity, while ensuring non-cardiotoxic compounds pass this phase of the drug approval process. In this study, we develop an in vitro-in silico pipeline using human induced stem-cell derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) to address this problem. The pipeline includes a model-guided optimization that produces a voltage-clamp (VC) protocol to determine drug block of seven cardiac ion channels. Such VC data, along with action potential (AP) recordings, were acquired from iPSC-CMs before and after treatment with a control solution or a low-, intermediate-, or high-risk drug. We identified significant AP prolongation (a proarrhythmia indicator) in two high-risk drugs and, from the VC data, determined strong ion channel blocks that led to the AP changes. The VC data also uncovered an undocumented funny current (If) block by quinine, which we confirmed with experiments using a HEK-293 expression line. We present a new approach to cardiotoxicity screening that simultaneously evaluates proarrhythmia risk (e.g. AP prolongation) and mechanism (e.g. channel block) from iPSC-CMs.

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 117955811988634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aude Braye ◽  
Herman Tournaye ◽  
Ellen Goossens

Young boys undergoing gonadotoxic treatments are at high risk of spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) loss and fertility problems later in life. Stem cell loss can also occur in specific genetic conditions, eg, Klinefelter syndrome (KS). Before puberty, these boys do not yet produce sperm. Hence, they cannot benefit from sperm banking. An emerging alternative is the freezing of testicular tissue aiming to preserve the SSCs for eventual autologous transplantation or in vitro maturation at adult age. Many fertility preservation programmes include cryopreservation of immature testicular tissue, although the restoration procedures are still under development. Until the end of 2018, the Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel has frozen testicular tissues of 112 patients between 8 months and 18 years of age. Testicular tissue was removed in view of gonadotoxic cancer treatment (35%), gonadotoxic conditioning therapy for bone marrow transplantation (35%) or in boys diagnosed with KS (30%). So far, none of these boys had their testicular tissue transplanted back. This article summarizes our experience with cryopreservation of immature testicular tissue over the past 16 years (2002-2018) and describes the key issues for setting up a cryopreservation programme for immature testicular tissue as a means to safeguard the future fertility of boys at high risk of SSC loss.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2654-2654
Author(s):  
Christina M. Wiedl ◽  
Terzah M. Horton ◽  
Randall M Rossi ◽  
Sarah J Neering ◽  
Valerie Grose ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2654 Poster Board II-630 Introduction: With the institution of multidrug, multiphase chemotherapy regimens, major improvements in clinical outcomes have been made in pediatric acute leukemia patients in the last thirty years. However, there remains a substantial percentage of pediatric patients who relapse and die of their disease, particularly with high risk ALL, T cell ALL and AML. It is possible that these patients' disease initiates from a leukemic stem cell such as those found in adult myeloid disease, or at the very least, harbor a chemo-resistant population. Our research has two main aims: first to evaluate the functional and phenotypic heterogeneity within standard risk (SR), high risk (HR) and relapsed (RD) pediatric leukemia. Second, to evaluate current treatment regimens for the selection of a chemo-resistant or LSC populations and then attempt to target this population with novel treatments. Methods: In vitro studies for functional heterogeneity include colony-forming assays (CFU) using methylcellulose and limiting-dilution suspension culture studies. Phenotypic heterogeneity is evaluated with multi-color flow cytometry and detection of alterations in aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. Xenograft studies in immune deficient mice are used to evaluate self-renewal capability, serial engraftment kinetics, and alterations in phenotype. Drug studies are performed by evaluating the differences in phenotype and CFU over time when treating with conventional induction chemotherapy or novel agents. Results: We have evaluated several SR and HR ALL samples in addition to some RD samples, which are paired with HR diagnostic samples. In vitro studies revealed the SR samples had little to no colony forming ability (0-1%) while the HR samples had approximately 3-5% and the RD samples 8-10% colony-forming ability. Likewise, the SR samples failed to engraft NOD-SCID mice while the HR samples, from patients with infantile ALL and the MLL translocation or T cell ALL, had robust engraftment in primary and secondary recipients. The engraftment kinetics were uniformly faster in secondary recipients. These findings suggest that HR leukemia may be the result of a leukemia-initiating cell with stem cell-like characteristics while SR ALL may arise from a more committed lymphoid progenitor. Interestingly, in the RD samples, several of the phenotypic markers are similar to that of the primary sample after treatment with induction therapy, particularly with regards to percentages of CD 34, 133-1, 133-2 and aldehyde dehydrogenase levels. Several HR samples have been exposed to induction chemotherapy (Decadron, Cytarabine, Doxorubicin and Vincristine), and the CFU potential and phenotype evaluated over a two-week time course. Notably, the majority of bulk disease is effectively killed, the CFU content actually increases two to three-fold, when an equivalent number of viable cells are analyzed. Furthermore, the phenotype reveals brighter staining with several proposed stem cell markers (CD34, 117, 133-1, 133-2, 123, and measurement of aldehyde dehyrogenase). These data indicate the selection of a chemo-resistant or LSC population. Conclusions: Our results to this point suggest important differences both functionally and phenotypically, between SR, HR and RD pediatric leukemia. These findings are consistent with what would be expected given clinical differences in each of these disease states and begins to establish a means of identifying a LSC or chemo-resistant population, which can be targeted with novel treatment regimens. Likewise, these techniques may also provide a means of evaluating for minimal residual disease (MRD) in a LSC or chemo-resistant population by identifying that population's phenotype by passaging the initial sample through serial murine engraftments or in vitro drug studies. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Janati Idrissi ◽  
Daniel Le Bourhis ◽  
Antoine Lefevre ◽  
Patrick Emond ◽  
Laurene Le Berre ◽  
...  

Abstract Currently, in vitro embryo production (IVP) is successfully commercially applied in cattle. However, the high sensitivity of embryos to cryopreservation in comparison to in vivo (IVD) embryos slows the dissemination of this biotechnology. Reduced cryotolerance is frequently associated with lipid accumulation in the cytoplasm mainly due to in vitro culture conditions. The objective of this study was to evaluate the lipid composition of biopsied and sexed embryos, produced either in vivo or in vitro from the same Holstein heifers before and after a slow freezing protocol. Lipid extracts were analysed by liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry, which enabled the detection of 496 features. Our results highlighted a lipid enrichment of IVP embryos in triglycerides and oxidised glycerophospholipids and a reduced abundance in glycerophospholipids. The slow freezing process affected the lipid profiles of IVP and IVD embryos similarly. Lysophosphatidylcholine content was reduced when embryos were frozen/thawed. In conclusion, the embryonic lipid profile is impacted by IVP and slow freezing protocols but not by sex. Lysophosphatidylcholine seemed highly sensitive to cryopreservation and might contribute to explain the lower quality of frozen embryos. Further studies are required to improve embryo freezability by modulating the lipidome.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3940-3940 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liqing Jin ◽  
Nathan Mbong ◽  
Stanley W.K. Ng ◽  
Jean C.Y. Wang ◽  
Mark D. Minden ◽  
...  

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a clonal malignant disease initiated and propagated by leukemia stem cells (LSCs). Both LSCs and normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) share many biological properties including self-renewal and quiescence. One such shared property that we have recently established involves the pro-survival features of proteostatic stress signaling. Stem cells have reduced protein translation initiation due to scarcity of the eIF2α translation initiation complex (van Galen et al Nature 2014; Cell Reports 2018). This in turn, increases the activity of activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) uniquely in HSCs and LSCs. In homeostasis, this level of ATF4 facilitates stem cell persistence and survival, but upon stronger stress activation stem cell apoptosis ensues. This mechanism predicts that agonists of the integrated stress response (ISR) could provide a novel therapeutic approach to eradicate LSCs. Here we report that the novel cereblon E3 ligase modulator (CELMoD) CC-90009, which causes degradation of the translation termination factor G1 to S phase transition protein 1 (GSPT1) and downstream activation of ISR, is potent against primary AML both in vitro and in vivo, and reduces self-renewing LSCs in preclinical xenograft models for human AML. We first carried out in vitro assays to evaluate the effect of CC-90009 on primary AML samples. We found that CC-90009 degraded GSPT1 in primary AML cells and induced leukemic cell apoptosis in 24 hours. Leukemic colony forming progenitors were also reduced by CC-90009 in a dose-dependent manner. We next tested the efficacy of CC-90009 against primary AML samples in xenografts in NOD/SCID mice. Leukemia cells were transplanted intrafemorally 21 days prior to CC-90009 treatment. Mice were treated with vehicle or CC-90009 at 2.5mg/kg BID for 4 weeks. Heterogeneous responses to the CC-90009 treatment were observed. Of 35 AML samples tested, 16 were highly responsive to CC-90009 with >75% reduction of AML engraftment, 10 showed moderate response between 45% and 75% reductions, and 9 showed reductions of <25%. AML is clinically characterized by accumulation of blasts that are impaired for differentiation and maturation. We observed that, in addition to the reduction of total AML graft, CC-90009 also induced myeloid differentiation of AML blasts in the CC-90009 responders, as evidenced by increases in late myeloid cell surface markers (CD14, CD15 and CD11b) and reductions of the immature marker CD34. To determine the efficacy of CC-90009 against AML cases at high risk of relapse following standard induction chemotherapy, we assessed CC-90009 efficacy vs. the status of an expression-based 17-gene leukemia stem cell score (the LSC17 score) that was recently implemented for rapid risk stratification of AML patients (Ng et al, Nature 2016). LSC17-high patients are predicted to have poor treatment response and poor clinical outcome. We found that, while 8 out of 9 poor responders to CC-90009 had high LSC17 scores, 20 out of 28 samples that had high LSC17 scores responded well to CC-90009, indicating that the drug is able to target high risk cases. Serial transplantation utilizing limiting dilution analysis showed that CC-90009 targeted self-renewing LSCs. Our data established that a new CELMoD CC-90009 has anti-proliferative effects on human primary AML cells and self-renewing LSCs evaluated in xenograft assays. These observations provide important implications for CC-90009 in its clinical development as a new therapeutic agent to treat AML patients with high risk disease when treated with standard of care therapies. Currently, a phase I study evaluating CC-90009 in relapsed or refractory AML is ongoing (CC-90009-AML-001; NCT02848001). Disclosures Jin: Trillium Therapeutics: Other: licensing agreement. Ng:Celgene: Research Funding. Wang:Pfizer AG Switzerland: Honoraria, Other: Travel and accommodation; Trilium therapeutics: Other: licensing agreement, Research Funding; NanoString: Other: Travel and accommodation; Pfizer International: Honoraria, Other: Travel and accommodation. Minden:Trillium Therapetuics: Other: licensing agreement. Fan:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pierce:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pourdehnad:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Hatani ◽  
Shunsuke Funakoshi ◽  
Thomas J Deerinck ◽  
Eric A Bushong ◽  
Takeshi Kimura ◽  
...  

Background: Although studies have feasibility of in vivo cardiac transplantation of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) in animal experiments, nano-structural confirmation of the successful incorporation of the engrafted iPSC-CMs including electron microscopy (EM) has not been accomplished, partly because identification of graft cells in EM has proven to be difficult. However, with a new genetically encoded probe, the monomeric 28-kDa peroxidase reporter 2 (APEX2), which withstands strong EM fixation, this problem can now be done. We have now been able to test whether APEX2 can identify iPSC-CMs in host heart after long-term engrafting, and evaluate the engrafted iPSC-CMs in post-myocardial infarction using EM. Methods: We established human iPSC lines which stably expressed histone H2B-APEX2 (APEX2 iPSCs). After differentiating APEX2 iPSCs into CM in vitro, purified cells were transplanted into NOG mouse hearts with myocardial infarction by direct injections into the myocardium. One and 3 months after transplantation, we mapped engraft iPS-CMs using high resolution micro-CT and evaluated their ultrastructure by EM. Results: APEX2 was stably expressed and labeled histone H2B in iPSCs before and after in vitro differentiation into CM. Graft efficiency of APEX2 iPSC-CMs in NOG heart was excellent and APEX2 expression sustained over 3 months in vivo . APEX2 reaction observed in EM clearly identified engrafted APEX2 iPSC-CMs in niches surrounded by host CMs and their physical interaction was visualized. EM also revealed a progression in the maturation of sarcomeric structure and mitochondria in engrafted iPSC-CMs, by comparing data at 1 and 3 months after transplantation. Conclusion: We demonstrate that APEX2 is a versatile genetic reporter to trace cell fates in living animals over many months. Using APEX2-based staining, we were able to identify and characterize the maturation process of iPSC-CMs, and determine how they distribute within myocardial niches, as well as their interaction with host CMs. This method should be useful to many studies of stem cell-based cell replacement therapy, as it allows both tracking of cells and the ultrastructural characterization of engrafted cell and graft-host interactions.


Author(s):  
Steven William Dixon ◽  
Tracey Jane Collard ◽  
Eleanor May Harrisdotter Mortensson ◽  
Danny Nigel Legge ◽  
Adam Christian Chambers ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Most colorectal cancers (CRC) arise sporadically from precursor lesions: colonic polyps. Polyp resection prevents progression to CRC. Risk of future polyps is proportional to the number and size of polyps detected at screening, allowing identification of high-risk individuals who may benefit from effective chemoprophylaxis. We aimed to investigate the potential of 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA), a medication used in the treatment of ulcerative colitis, as a possible preventative agent for sporadic CRC. Methods Human colorectal adenoma (PC/AA/C1, S/AN/C1 and S/RG/C2), transformed adenoma PC/AA/C1/SB10 and carcinoma cell lines (LS174T and SW620) were treated with 5-ASA. The effect on growth in two- and three-dimensional (3D) culture, β-catenin transcriptional activity and on cancer stemness properties of the cells were investigated. Results 5-ASA was shown, in vitro, to inhibit the growth of adenoma cells and suppress β-catenin transcriptional activity. Downregulation of β-catenin was found to repress expression of stem cell marker LGR5 (leucine-rich G protein-coupled receptor-5) and functionally suppress stemness in human adenoma and carcinoma cells using 3D models of tumorigenesis. Conclusions 5-ASA can suppress the cancer stem phenotype in adenoma-derived cells. Affordable and well-tolerated, 5-ASA is an outstanding candidate as a chemoprophylactic medication to reduce the risk of colorectal polyps and CRC in those at high risk.


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