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. 2021 Dec 2;28(12):2137-2152.e6.
doi: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.11.007.

Co-emergence of cardiac and gut tissues promotes cardiomyocyte maturation within human iPSC-derived organoids

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Free article

Co-emergence of cardiac and gut tissues promotes cardiomyocyte maturation within human iPSC-derived organoids

Ana C Silva et al. Cell Stem Cell. .
Free article

Abstract

During embryogenesis, paracrine signaling between tissues in close proximity contributes to the determination of their respective cell fate(s) and development into functional organs. Organoids are in vitro models that mimic organ formation and cellular heterogeneity, but lack the paracrine input of surrounding tissues. Here, we describe a human multilineage iPSC-derived organoid that recapitulates cooperative cardiac and gut development and maturation, with extensive cellular and structural complexity in both tissues. We demonstrate that the presence of endoderm tissue (gut/intestine) in the organoids contributed to the development of cardiac tissue features characteristic of stages after heart tube formation, including cardiomyocyte expansion, compartmentalization, enrichment of atrial/nodal cells, myocardial compaction, and fetal-like functional maturation. Overall, this study demonstrates the ability to generate and mature cooperative tissues originating from different germ lineages within a single organoid model, an advance that will further the examination of multi-tissue interactions during development, physiological maturation, and disease.

Keywords: Organoids; atrial/nodal cardiomyocytes; co-emergence; cooperative development; endoderm; heart; intestine; maturation; morphogenesis; pluripotent stem cells.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests T.C.M. is a consultant for Tenaya Therapeutics and B.G.B. is a co-founder. Both authors own equity in Tenaya Therapeutics. The other authors declare no competing interests.

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