Publicaciones científicas

Biologically-Inspired Melt Electrowriting for the Generation of Highly Biomimetic Functional Myocardium

18-abr-2025 | Revista: Advanced Functional Materials

Olalla Iglesias-García, María Flandes-Iparraguirre, Pilar Montero-Calle, Ricardo M. Rosales, Asier Ullate-Agote, Andrea Sánchez-Bueno, Eduardo Larequi, Ilazki Anaut-Lusar, Nicolás Laita, Aida Oliván-Viguera, Elena Iglesias, Gloria Abizanda, Patxi San Martín-Úriz, Paula Aguirre-Ruiz, Xabier L. Aranguren, Manuel García de Yébenes, Juan José Gavira, Miguel Ángel Martínez, Estefanía Peña, Manuel Doblaré, Elena M. de-Juan-Pardo, Esther Pueyo, Felipe Prosper, Manuel M. Mazo Vega


Abstract

In the heart, the specific 3D structure of myocardial layers produces an efficient ejection of blood. When myocardial infarction strikes, this architecture is disrupted, adding a disarranged contraction to the decreased availability of pumping units (cardiomyocytes, CMs). In this work, the alignment of cardiac fibers in a large animal model (pig) is characterized and employ melt electrowriting (MEW) to fabricate a bio-inspired scaffold with diamond-shaped pores. Using human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived CMs and cardiac fibroblasts, human cardiac tissues with a biomimetic in-plane contraction are generated. MEW-diamond tissues beat macroscopically for over 1 month, with significantly faster kinetics, increased force, and higher conduction velocity than those based on square or rectangular pores. The diamond design induces a specific hiPSC-CM alignment resulting in the observed in-plane contraction. Transcriptomic analysis using bulk RNA-seq reveals diamond-MEW tissues present features of maturation as compared to traditional 2D cultures. Finally, the bio-inspired cardiac tissues are employed to treat an infarction model in athymic rats, showing a significant benefit on systolic function and remodeling, tied to the presence of large grafts of human cells remuscularizing the ventricular wall. All in all, it is demonstrated that the new design generates superior human cardiac tissues with therapeutic capacity.

 https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202420106