Systemic gene transfer enables optogenetic pacing of mouse hearts

CC Vogt, T Bruegmann, D Malan… - Cardiovascular …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
CC Vogt, T Bruegmann, D Malan, A Ottersbach, W Roell, BK Fleischmann, P Sasse
Cardiovascular research, 2015academic.oup.com
Aims Optogenetic pacing of the heart has been demonstrated in transgenic animals
expressing channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2). However, for the clinical use of optogenetics to
treat cardiac arrhythmias, gene transfer to non-transgenic hearts is required. The aim of this
study was to describe a reliable method for gene transfer of ChR2 into a sufficient
percentage of cardiomyocytes to overcome the electrical sink of all the coupled non-
expressing cardiomyocytes during optical pacing of the whole heart in vivo. Methods and …
Aims
Optogenetic pacing of the heart has been demonstrated in transgenic animals expressing channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2). However, for the clinical use of optogenetics to treat cardiac arrhythmias, gene transfer to non-transgenic hearts is required. The aim of this study was to describe a reliable method for gene transfer of ChR2 into a sufficient percentage of cardiomyocytes to overcome the electrical sink of all the coupled non-expressing cardiomyocytes during optical pacing of the whole heart in vivo.
Methods and results
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) with cardiac tropism for expression of ChR2 in fusion with mCherry was systemically injected into wild-type mouse hearts. Bright mCherry fluorescence was detected in the whole heart 4–10 weeks later. Single-cell dissociation revealed that on average 58% cardiomyocytes were mCherry-positive. These showed light-induced inward currents, action potentials, and contractions. Pulsed illumination of the left ventricle induced ventricular pacing in vivo in 74% of mice, and higher light intensities were required for reduced pulse duration or size of illumination. Non-responding hearts showed low AAV expression, and the threshold for optical pacing was estimated to be 35–40% ChR2-expressing cardiomyocytes. Optical pacing in vivo was stable over extended periods without negative effects on normal sinus rhythm and ECG parameters after termination of stimulation indicating sufficient cardiac output during pacing.
Conclusions
Gene transfer generates sufficient ChR2 photocurrent for reliable optogenetic pacing in vivo and lays out the basis for future optogenetic pacemaker and pain-free defibrillation therapies.
Oxford University Press