Transient pacing in pigs with complete heart block via myocardial injection of mRNA coding for the T-box transcription factor 18

The adenovirus-mediated somatic transfer of the embryonic T-box transcription factor 18 ( TBX18 ) gene can convert chamber cardiomyocytes into induced pacemaker cells. However, the translation of therapeutic TBX18-induced cardiac pacing faces safety challenges. Here we show that the myocardial expre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature biomedical engineering 2024-09, Vol.8 (9), p.1124-1141
Hauptverfasser: Wolfson, David W., Kim, Nam Kyun, Lee, Ki Hong, Beyersdorf, Jared P., Langberg, Jonathan J., Fernandez, Natasha, Choi, Dahim, Zureick, Nadine, Kim, Tae Yun, Bae, Seongho, Gu, Jin-Mo, Kirschman, Jonathan L., Fan, Jinqi, Sheng, Christina Y., Gottlieb Sen, Danielle, Mettler, Bret, Sung, Jung Hoon, Yoon, Young-sup, Park, Sung-Jin, Santangelo, Philip J., Cho, Hee Cheol
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The adenovirus-mediated somatic transfer of the embryonic T-box transcription factor 18 ( TBX18 ) gene can convert chamber cardiomyocytes into induced pacemaker cells. However, the translation of therapeutic TBX18-induced cardiac pacing faces safety challenges. Here we show that the myocardial expression of synthetic TBX18 mRNA in animals generates de novo pacing and limits innate and inflammatory immune responses. In rats, intramyocardially injected mRNA remained localized, whereas direct myocardial injection of an adenovirus carrying a reporter gene resulted in diffuse expression and in substantial spillover to the liver, spleen and lungs. Transient expression of TBX18 mRNA in rats led to de novo automaticity and pacemaker properties and, compared with the injection of adenovirus, to substantial reductions in the expression of inflammatory genes and in activated macrophage populations. In rodent and clinically relevant porcine models of complete heart block, intramyocardially injected TBX18 mRNA provided rate-adaptive cardiac pacing for one month that strongly correlated with the animal’s sinus rhythm and physical activity. TBX18 mRNA may aid the development of biological pacemakers. Intramyocardial injection of synthetic mRNA coding for the embryonic T-box transcription factor 18 gene generates rate-adaptive cardiac pacing and limits innate and inflammatory immune responses, as shown in rodents and pigs.
ISSN:2157-846X
2157-846X
DOI:10.1038/s41551-024-01211-9