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In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment

Human-based computational modelling and simulation are powerful tools to accelerate the mechanistic understanding of cardiac patho-physiology, and to develop and evaluate therapeutic interventions. The aim of this study is to calibrate and evaluate human ventricular electro-mechanical models for inv...

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Autores principales: Margara, Francesca, Wang, Zhinuo J., Levrero-Florencio, Francesc, Santiago, Alfonso, Vázquez, Mariano, Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso, Rodriguez, Blanca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pergamon Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7848595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32710902
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2020.06.007
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author Margara, Francesca
Wang, Zhinuo J.
Levrero-Florencio, Francesc
Santiago, Alfonso
Vázquez, Mariano
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
author_facet Margara, Francesca
Wang, Zhinuo J.
Levrero-Florencio, Francesc
Santiago, Alfonso
Vázquez, Mariano
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
author_sort Margara, Francesca
collection PubMed
description Human-based computational modelling and simulation are powerful tools to accelerate the mechanistic understanding of cardiac patho-physiology, and to develop and evaluate therapeutic interventions. The aim of this study is to calibrate and evaluate human ventricular electro-mechanical models for investigations on the effect of the electro-mechanical coupling and pharmacological action on human ventricular electrophysiology, calcium dynamics, and active contraction. The most recent models of human ventricular electrophysiology, excitation-contraction coupling, and active contraction were integrated, and the coupled models were calibrated using human experimental data. Simulations were then conducted using the coupled models to quantify the effects of electro-mechanical coupling and drug exposure on electrophysiology and force generation in virtual human ventricular cardiomyocytes and tissue. The resulting calibrated human electro-mechanical models yielded active tension, action potential, and calcium transient metrics that are in agreement with experiments for endocardial, epicardial, and mid-myocardial human samples. Simulation results correctly predicted the inotropic response of different multichannel action reference compounds and demonstrated that the electro-mechanical coupling improves the robustness of repolarisation under drug exposure compared to electrophysiology-only models. They also generated additional evidence to explain the partial mismatch between in-silico and in-vitro experiments on drug-induced electrophysiology changes. The human calibrated and evaluated modelling and simulation framework constructed in this study opens new avenues for future investigations into the complex interplay between the electrical and mechanical cardiac substrates, its modulation by pharmacological action, and its translation to tissue and organ models of cardiac patho-physiology.
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spelling pubmed-78485952021-02-04 In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment Margara, Francesca Wang, Zhinuo J. Levrero-Florencio, Francesc Santiago, Alfonso Vázquez, Mariano Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso Rodriguez, Blanca Prog Biophys Mol Biol Article Human-based computational modelling and simulation are powerful tools to accelerate the mechanistic understanding of cardiac patho-physiology, and to develop and evaluate therapeutic interventions. The aim of this study is to calibrate and evaluate human ventricular electro-mechanical models for investigations on the effect of the electro-mechanical coupling and pharmacological action on human ventricular electrophysiology, calcium dynamics, and active contraction. The most recent models of human ventricular electrophysiology, excitation-contraction coupling, and active contraction were integrated, and the coupled models were calibrated using human experimental data. Simulations were then conducted using the coupled models to quantify the effects of electro-mechanical coupling and drug exposure on electrophysiology and force generation in virtual human ventricular cardiomyocytes and tissue. The resulting calibrated human electro-mechanical models yielded active tension, action potential, and calcium transient metrics that are in agreement with experiments for endocardial, epicardial, and mid-myocardial human samples. Simulation results correctly predicted the inotropic response of different multichannel action reference compounds and demonstrated that the electro-mechanical coupling improves the robustness of repolarisation under drug exposure compared to electrophysiology-only models. They also generated additional evidence to explain the partial mismatch between in-silico and in-vitro experiments on drug-induced electrophysiology changes. The human calibrated and evaluated modelling and simulation framework constructed in this study opens new avenues for future investigations into the complex interplay between the electrical and mechanical cardiac substrates, its modulation by pharmacological action, and its translation to tissue and organ models of cardiac patho-physiology. Pergamon Press 2021-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7848595/ /pubmed/32710902 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2020.06.007 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Margara, Francesca
Wang, Zhinuo J.
Levrero-Florencio, Francesc
Santiago, Alfonso
Vázquez, Mariano
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title_full In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title_fullStr In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title_full_unstemmed In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title_short In-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
title_sort in-silico human electro-mechanical ventricular modelling and simulation for drug-induced pro-arrhythmia and inotropic risk assessment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7848595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32710902
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2020.06.007
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