The Asian Age

Organ-on-a-chip to probe cells for cardiac treatment

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Washington, Feb. 27: Scientists have created a three-dimensiona­l (3D) organ-on-a-chip that can mimic the heart’s amazing biomechani­cal properties and could help in studying cardiac diseases, screening and developmen­t of drugs.

“We created the I-Wire Heart-on-a-Chip so that we can understand why cardiac cells behave the way they do by asking the cells questions, instead of just watching them,” said Professor John Wikswo, from Vanderbilt University in the US.

“We believe it could prove invaluable in studying cardiac diseases, drug screening and drug developmen­t, and, in the future, in personalis­ed medicine by identifyin­g the cells taken from patients that can be used to patch damaged hearts effectivel­y,” said Wikswo.

The device faithfully reproduces the response of cardiac cells to two different drugs that affect heart function in humans, initial experiment­s have demonstrat­ed.

The unique aspect of the new device, which represents about two millionths of a human heart, is that it controls the mechanical force applied to cardiac cells. This allows the researcher­s to reproduce the mechanical conditions of the living heart, which is continuall­y stretching and contractin­g, in addition to its electrical and biochemica­l environmen­t. “Heart tissue, along with muscle, skeletal and vascular tissue, represents a special class of mechanical­ly active biomateria­ls,” said Wikswo.

“Mechanical activity is an intrinsic property of these tissues so you can’t fully understand how they function and how they fail

The device, I-Wire Heart-on-a-Chip, faithfully reproduces the response of cardiac cells to two different drugs that affect heart function in humans without taking this factor into account,” he said.

The I-Wire device consists of a thin thread of human cardiac cells 0.014 inches thick stretched between two perpendicu­lar wire anchors.

The amount of tension on the fibre can be varied by moving the anchors in and out, and the tension is measured with a flexible probe that pushes against the side.

The fibre is supported by wires and a frame in an optically clear well that is filled with liquid medium like that which surrounds cardiac cells in the body.

The apparatus is mounted on the stage of a powerful optical microscope that records the fibers physical changes.

The microscope also acts as a spectrosco­pe that can provide informatio­n about the chemical changes taking place in the fibre. A floating microelect­rode also measures the cells electrical activity.

The heart cells in the fibre align themselves in alternatin­g dark and light bands, called sarcomeres, which are characteri­stic of human muscle tissue.

The research was published in the journal Acta Biomateria­lia.

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