US scientists recreate heart defect in a lab dish

CHICAGO, (Reuters) – Using skin cells taken from  children with a rare heart defect, U.S. researchers have  created beating heart cells in the lab with the same heart  defect, allowing researchers to test new drugs in human cells  instead of mice.

While most heart drugs had no effect on the cells, a cancer  drug being studied by Cyclacel Pharmaceuticals Inc appears to  help, the team led by Ricardo Dolmetsch of Stanford University  reported on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

The study is among the first to use powerful new technology  to create human models of disease by reprogramming ordinary cells to behave like embryonic stem cells, the body’s master  cells that can give rise to any tissue in the body.

“Because every cell in our body has the same genetic  programming, that means we can take skin cells and reprogram  them to generate stem cells, and we can take those cells to  make heart cells,” Dolmetsch said in a telephone interview.

Discovered in 2006, induced pluripotent stem cells or iPS  cells can be collected from people with genetic diseases and  grown in batches that live for months and years in the lab.

Dolmetsch’s team collected skin cells from children with  Timothy syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that causes autism  and long QT syndrome, a defect in the timing of the heart’s  contractions that makes the heart beat out of sync.

People with long QT syndrome have irregular heart beats  and are vulnerable to ventricle fibrillation, a potentially  deadly heart rhythm in which the heart beats chaotically.

“We generated these reprogrammed cells from these kids and  over the last four years or so we developed these methods for  converting these cells into cardiac cells,” Dolmetsch said.

The team reprogrammed skin cells from two Timothy syndrome  patients and five normal people, then coaxed these cells into  becoming cells that form the atrium and ventricle of the heart  and nodal cells — cells that make up the heart’s electrical  system. The three cell types spontaneously clumped together to  form miniature one-chambered hearts.