The research described in this thesis focuses on the use of both embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to understand cardiac lineage development and disease. To... Show moreThe research described in this thesis focuses on the use of both embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to understand cardiac lineage development and disease. To investigate the possibility of studying inherited cardiac diseases, we compared pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes by investigating both a mouse and human model of a complex cardiac overlap syndrome caused by a mutation in the gene SCN5A. We demonstrated that both ESC- and iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes can recapitulate the characteristics of the disease. Furthermore this thesis describes a detailed protocol to differentiate human pluripotent stem cells to cardiomyocytes that was applied in the study comparing hESC- and hiPSC- derived cardiomyocytes at several time points during cardiac differentiation. We targeted fluorescent marker GFP to one allele of NKX2-5 in a human iPSC line that now matched a similar human ESC reporter line previously generated in the laboratory. This offered the opportunity to obtain cardiomyocytes and their precursors at different time points during the differentiation and determine the true degree of similarity between both pluripotent stem cell sources. Additionally the same hESC- and hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes were compared to a unique set of foetal heart samples. Show less
It is critical to gain knowledge in the underlying mechanisms that control human cardiovascular developm ent, which helps us to understand the onset of congenital cardiovascular diseases, and to... Show moreIt is critical to gain knowledge in the underlying mechanisms that control human cardiovascular developm ent, which helps us to understand the onset of congenital cardiovascular diseases, and to develop optimal culture methods for efficient in vitro cardiomyocyte differentiation from hPSCs, which are of interest for final translational applications including screening and efficacy assays for disease modelling, drug discovery and development, personalized medicine, and perhaps the regeneration of cardiovascular tissues for therapeutic purposes. In this thesis, we show how genetic manipulation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), resulting in the genomic integration of a fluorescent protein encoding sequence at the locus of a key cardiac transcription factor, allows us to visualize and isolate early pre-cardiac progenitors subpopulations, and to study the molecular mechanisms involved in their further differentiation to cells of the cardiac lineage, including smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells, and cardiomyocyte subtypes. Show less