T-World Virtual Human Cardiomyocyte. I. Development, Validation, and Cell Arrhythmogenesis.

Tomek J., Holmes M., Bury T., Tomkova M., Jo H., Nagy N., Bertrand A., Bueno-Orovio A., Colman MA., Rodriguez B., Bers DM., Heijman J.

BackgroundCardiovascular disease is the leading global cause of morbidity and mortality. New technologies are needed to improve mechanistic understanding and inform therapeutic strategies. Human-centric cardiac simulations show great promise; however, existing cellular models can reproduce only a few arrhythmia-driving behaviors and show important discrepancies with experimental data. We aimed to develop a new model overcoming this lack of generality, which markedly limits the predictivity and translational utility of virtual cardiomyocytes.MethodsWe developed T-World, a novel virtual human cardiomyocyte, using data-driven differential equations to describe sex-specific excitation-contraction coupling, mechanical contraction, β-adrenergic signaling, and its effects on cellular targets. The model contains several key innovations, including a new approach to coupling L-type calcium channels and ryanodine receptors, with updated calcium-dependent-inactivation of the former and novel calcium-induced refractoriness and complete reparameterization of the latter. We also redeveloped the sodium-potassium pump and made major improvements to the sodium-calcium exchanger formulation.ResultsT-World shows broad agreement with experimental data on rate-dependent action potential (AP), calcium handling, and contraction properties. Extensively validated on independent data, T-World demonstrates strong predictive performance, for example, in drug-induced AP changes. The model reproduces the effects of sympathetic stimulation, including AP duration shortening and increased calcium-transient amplitude and contractility. Importantly, it recapitulates for the first time all key cellular mechanisms driving life-threatening arrhythmias (early and delayed afterdepolarizations, alternans, and steep S1-S2 restitution), including experimentally observed responses to interventions such as sympathetic activation, SERCA (sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase) inhibition, and AP prolongation. Combined with the model's ability to simulate physiological sex-specific differences in electrophysiology, this revealed increased proclivity of female cardiomyocytes to early afterdepolarizations and steep restitution of AP duration.ConclusionsT-World is a highly general and predictive open-source computer model of a human ventricular cardiomyocyte, suitable for multiscale research studies investigating determinants of arrhythmogenesis.

DOI

10.1161/circresaha.125.328073

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2026-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Addresses

Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Genetics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom. (J.T., H.J.).

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