
Collaboration will be vital to help advance the field of advanced medicine. TECHNOBEAT (Tools and Technologies for Breakthrough in Heart Therapies), funded by the European Commission’s Horizon2020, is one example of a collaborative project that is addressing unmet medical needs in cardiovascular disease. Here, we speak with Robert Zweigerdt, a principal investigator at Hannover Medical School and coordinator of TECHNOBEAT, and Katharina Kinast at Eppendorf, one of the partners in the project.
How did the TECHNOBEAT project came about?
Robert Zweigerdt: After James Thomson, in collaboration with Joseph Itskovitz-Eldor (who is one of the partners in TECHNOBEAT) and co-workers, published the derivation of human embryonic stem cells (hESC) in 1998, the field of stem cell research received a massive boost. The unlimited proliferation potential of human embryonic stem cells (hESC) and their ability to differentiate into, in principle, any somatic cell type in vitro, has opened a whole new universe of exciting possibilities in regenerative medicine, pharmacological research, human developmental biology and basic stem cell research.The possibilities where further stimulated by the derivation of induced pluripotent stem cells from mice (2006) and humans (2007) by Shinya Yamanaka and his team, through a technology enabling the so called “reprograming of somatic cells” from adult patients into an ESC-like state. These findings laid the foundations for the routine use of stem cells in medicine because they allowed the scientific community to bypass the ethical issues associated with the use of human embryonic stem cells. Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC; an umbrella term for hESC and hiPSC) can serve as a universal cell source for the derivation of unlimited amounts of functional somatic cells to help in a variety of conditions, such as loss of dopaminergic neurons in the brain leading to Parkinson’s disease, the autoimmune-triggered loss of beta cells in the pancreas underlying diabetes type 1, or age-related blindness demanding the replacement of retinal pigment epithelial cells to stop progression of – and ideally cure – macular degeneration. Cardiovascular diseases, particularly ischemic cardiomyopathies, remain the major global causes of morbidity and mortality affecting millions of patients worldwide. The obstruction of coronary arteries, which normally supply the heart with oxygenated blood, triggers ischemia in areas downstream of the occluded vessel, a condition known as myocardial infarction. The condition often leads to the terminal loss of billions of heart muscle cells, which are not replaced by endogenous repair mechanisms and may result in reduced heart function and ultimately heart failure.
TECHNOBEAT aims to develop new treatment options for patients suffering from heart failure caused by the loss of heart muscle tissue following a heart attack. The consortium calls on the expertise of a network of leading European entities in the cardiovascular field, including Hannover Medical School – a medical center with a strong focus on translating cell-based regenerative medicine for several organs; Leiden University, which offers leading expertise in basic mechanism of cardiovascular differentiation of hPSCs; and Utrecht Medical Centre, which brings top expertise in experimental cardiology and development of pre-clinical animal models. The consortium also involves partners with leading know-how in clinical stem cell production: Paracelsus University in Salzburg provides expertise in the derivation and clinical application of adult stem cells (in particular, mesenchymal stem cells, an important cellular component for organ repair) and Kadimastem, located in Rohovot, Israel, is developing protocols for the clinically compliant manufacturing of hPSCs and their progenies, as well as expertise in handling the regulatory requirements of regenerative medicine. In addition, technical innovation in hardware development for stem cell bioprocessing, monitoring and analysis is essential to our project – as well as the whole cell therapy field. In the area of bioreactor development, Eppendorf provides their support, while OVIZIO provides innovative solutions in the monitoring of cells and more complex cell aggregates. It also goes without saying that safety is of great importance in cell-based organ repair – and that specifically requires monitoring of the genomic integrity of mass-expanded and differentiated stem cells to avoid process-induced cell transformation and the potential development of tumors. Thus, our project partner at the University of Sheffield in the UK is applying its long-standing expertise in analyzing the genomic stability of hESC lines to the field of hiPSCs manufacturing (hiPSC are the exclusive pluripotent stem cell source applied in TECHNOBEAT in compliance with European regulations). The consortium aims to establish novel tools and technologies required for the controlled, clinically- and regulatory compliant mass production of hiPSC and their functional progenies required for meaningful heart therapies. We also aim to establish efficient transplantation and functional integration of donor cells in pre-clinical animal models, and to demonstrate safety and therapeutic efficiency. In addition to these cell production and application goals, the project aims to advance cardiac tissue engineering and maturation technologies, supporting the utility of (typically immature) hiPSC progenies such as cardiomyocytes in vitro – thereby providing improved tools for the use of hiPSC-cardiomyocytes in drug discovery and drug safety in pharmacological research.
Katharina Kinast: For some time, Eppendorf has been aiming to improve bioprocessing equipment for the cultivation of stem cells. As part of this engagement, we have a long-standing cooperation with Robert Zweigerdt’s group at Hannover Medical School. Depending on the therapeutic application, stem cell-based therapies need ~1 x 105 to 1 x 1010 cells per treatment dose per patient. It is difficult to reproducibly produce such high cell numbers (i.e. those > 1 x 108 required for most disease including heart repair) in conventional, two-dimensional culture systems, such as flasks or dishes, and stirred-tank bioreactor systems have clear advantages; they require less lab space than the corresponding number of cell culture flasks, can help with process scale-up, and allow for close monitoring and control. Within the TECHNOBEAT project, we will develop new impeller and vessel designs to optimize hiPSC culture mixing and shear characteristics. Furthermore, in cooperation with the project partners from OVIZIO, we plan to integrate holographic microscopy to monitor cell aggregate formation in real time. We will facilitate communication of the device with our bioprocess control software, so that values measured by the microscopic device are communicated to the software in real-time. Thus, they can be used for automated bioprocess control, in addition to conventionally measured parameters such as pH, dissolved oxygen, and temperature.