Background: Human cardiac organoids closely replicate the architecture and function of the human heart, offering a potential accurate platform for studying cellular and molecular features of aging cardiomyopathy. Senolytics have shown potential in addressing age-related pathologies but their potential to reverse aging-related human cardiomyopathy remains largely unexplored. Methods: We employed human iPSC-derived cardiac organoids (hCOs/hCardioids) to model doxorubicin(DOXO)-induced cardiomyopathy in an aged context. hCardioids were treated with DOXO and subsequently with a combination of two senolytics: dasatinib (D) and quercetin (Q). Results: DOXO-treated hCardioids exhibited significantly increased oxidative stress, DNA damage (pH2AX), cellular senescence (p16INK4A) and decreased cell proliferation associated with a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). DOXO-treated hCardioids were considerably deprived of cardiac progenitors and displayed reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation as well as contractility. These distinctive aging-associated characteristics were confirmed by global RNA-sequencing analysis. Treatment with D+Q reversed these effects, reducing oxidative stress and senescence markers, alleviating SASP, and restoring hCardioids viability and function. Additionally, senolytics replenished cardiac progenitors and reversed the cardiomyocyte proliferation deficit. Conclusions: Doxorubicin triggers an age-associated phenotype in hCardioids reliably modelling the main cellular and molecular features of aging cardiomyopathy. Senescence is a key mechanism of the aged-hCOs phenotype as senolytics rejuvenated aged-hCardioids restoring their structure and function while reverting the age-associated regenerative deficit.

Senolytics rejuvenate aging cardiomyopathy in human cardiac organoids

Stincelli A.;Veltri P.;Torella D.;
2025-01-01

Abstract

Background: Human cardiac organoids closely replicate the architecture and function of the human heart, offering a potential accurate platform for studying cellular and molecular features of aging cardiomyopathy. Senolytics have shown potential in addressing age-related pathologies but their potential to reverse aging-related human cardiomyopathy remains largely unexplored. Methods: We employed human iPSC-derived cardiac organoids (hCOs/hCardioids) to model doxorubicin(DOXO)-induced cardiomyopathy in an aged context. hCardioids were treated with DOXO and subsequently with a combination of two senolytics: dasatinib (D) and quercetin (Q). Results: DOXO-treated hCardioids exhibited significantly increased oxidative stress, DNA damage (pH2AX), cellular senescence (p16INK4A) and decreased cell proliferation associated with a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). DOXO-treated hCardioids were considerably deprived of cardiac progenitors and displayed reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation as well as contractility. These distinctive aging-associated characteristics were confirmed by global RNA-sequencing analysis. Treatment with D+Q reversed these effects, reducing oxidative stress and senescence markers, alleviating SASP, and restoring hCardioids viability and function. Additionally, senolytics replenished cardiac progenitors and reversed the cardiomyocyte proliferation deficit. Conclusions: Doxorubicin triggers an age-associated phenotype in hCardioids reliably modelling the main cellular and molecular features of aging cardiomyopathy. Senescence is a key mechanism of the aged-hCOs phenotype as senolytics rejuvenated aged-hCardioids restoring their structure and function while reverting the age-associated regenerative deficit.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11770/379545
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