Myocardial
microenvironment plays a decisive role in guiding the
function and fate of cardiomyocytes, and engineering this extracellular
niche holds great promise for cardiac tissue regeneration. Platforms
utilizing hybrid hydrogels containing various types of conductive
nanoparticles have been a critical tool for constructing engineered
cardiac tissues with outstanding mechanical integrity and improved
electrophysiological properties. However, there has been no attempt
to directly compare the efficacy of these hybrid hydrogels and decipher
the mechanisms behind how these platforms differentially regulate
cardiomyocyte behavior. Here, we employed gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA)
hydrogels containing three different types of carbon-based nanoparticles:
carbon nanotubes (CNTs), graphene oxide (GO), and reduced GO (rGO),
to investigate the influence of these hybrid scaffolds on the structural
organization and functionality of cardiomyocytes. Using immunofluorescent
staining for assessing cellular organization and proliferation, we
showed that electrically conductive scaffolds (CNT- and rGO-GelMA
compared to relatively nonconductive GO-GelMA) played a significant
role in promoting desirable morphology of cardiomyocytes and elevated
the expression of functional cardiac markers, while maintaining their
viability. Electrophysiological analysis revealed that these engineered
cardiac tissues showed distinct cardiomyocyte phenotypes and different
levels of maturity based on the substrate (CNT-GelMA: ventricular-like,
GO-GelMA: atrial-like, and rGO-GelMA: ventricular/atrial mixed phenotypes).
Through analysis of gene-expression patterns, we uncovered that the
engineered cardiac tissues matured on CNT-GelMA and native cardiac
tissues showed comparable expression levels of maturation markers.
Furthermore, we demonstrated that engineered cardiac tissues matured
on CNT-GelMA have increased functionality through integrin-mediated
mechanotransduction (via YAP/TAZ) in contrast to
cardiomyocytes cultured on rGO-GelMA.
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