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Bioengineering Approaches to In Vitro Modeling of Genetic and Acquired Cardiac Diseases

  • Open Access
  • 01-12-2025
  • Conditioning
  • Regenerative Medicine (SM Wu, Section Editor)
Published in:

Abstract

Purpose of Review

This review aims to explore recent advancements in bioengineering approaches used in developing and testing in vitro cardiac disease models. It seeks to find out how these tools can address the limitations of traditional in vitro models and be applied to improve our understanding of cardiac disease mechanisms, facilitate preclinical drug screening, and equip the development of personalized therapeutics.

Recent Findings

Human induced pluripotent stem cells have enabled the generation of diverse cardiac cell types and patient-specific models. Techniques like 3D tissue engineering, heart-on-a-chip platforms, biomechanical conditioning, and CRISPR-based gene editing have enabled faithful recreation of complex cardiac microenvironments and disease conditions. These models have advanced the study of both genetic and acquired cardiac disorders.

Summary

Bioengineered in vitro models are transforming the basic science and clinical research in cardiovascular disease by improving the biomimicry and complexity of tissue analogues, increasing throughput and reproducibility of screening platforms, as well as offering patient and disease specificity. Despite challenges in scalability and functional maturity, integrating multiple bioengineering techniques with advanced analytical tools in in vitro modeling platforms holds promise for future precision and personalized medicine and therapeutic innovations.
Title
Bioengineering Approaches to In Vitro Modeling of Genetic and Acquired Cardiac Diseases
Authors
Linqi Jin
Boeun Hwang
Sarah Rezapourdamanab
Vani Sridhar
Roshni Nandwani
Mehdi Salar Amoli
Vahid Serpooshan
Publication date
01-12-2025
Publisher
Springer US
Keyword
Conditioning
Published in
Current Cardiology Reports / Issue 1/2025
Print ISSN: 1523-3782
Electronic ISSN: 1534-3170
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11886-025-02218-7
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Independent Medical Education Grant:
  • Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc.
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Abstract graphic of layered, concentric circular shapes in bright green, pink, blue, and purple on a dark blue background. The rings and segments form a complex radial pattern without text/© Springer Health+ IME