The secret life of sarcomeres: stochastic heterogeneity of sarcomeres in beating stem-cell derived cardiomyocytes
ORAL
Abstract
Sarcomeres are the basic contractile units of cardiac muscle cells. We cultured individual hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes on biomimetic patterned substrates. We automatically tracked single sarcomere dynamics from high-speed confocal recordings with a custom machine-learning tool. While emergent cell-level contractions were smooth, we found highly stochastic and heterogeneous motions of single sarcomeres. Rigid mechanical constraints force sarcomeres into a tug-of-war like competition driving dynamic heterogeneity. Analysis of a large data set (>1200 cells) indicates that sarcomere heterogeneity is not caused by static non-uniformity among sarcomeres (e.g., strong/weak units), but can be primarily attributed to the stochastic and non-linear nature of sarcomere dynamics. We show that a simple dynamic model reproduces crucial experimental findings by assuming non-monotonic force-velocity relations for single sarcomeres, as previously predicted for ensembles of motor proteins. This led us to a novel, active matter perspective on sarcomere motion, with sarcomeres as interacting non-linear, stochastic agents.
–
Presenters
-
Christoph F Schmidt
Duke University
Authors
-
Christoph F Schmidt
Duke University
-
Daniel Haertter
Duke University
-
Wolfram-Hubertus Zimmermann
University of Göttingen, Medical Center
-
Lara Hauke
University of Göttingen, Medical School
-
Til Driehorst
University of Göttingen
-
Branimir Berecic
University of Göttingen, Medical School
-
Lukas Cyganec
University of Göttingen, Medical School
-
Malte Tiburcy
University of Göttingen, Medical School