TY - JOUR T1 - Monitoring contractility in single cardiomyocytes and whole hearts with bio-integrated microlasers JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/605444 SP - 605444 AU - Marcel Schubert AU - Lewis Woolfson AU - Isla RM Barnard AU - Andrew Morton AU - Becky Casement AU - Gavin B Robertson AU - Gareth B Miles AU - Samantha J Pitt AU - Carl S Tucker AU - Malte C Gather Y1 - 2019/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/06/17/605444.abstract N2 - Cardiac regeneration and stem cell therapies depend critically on the ability to locally resolve the contractile properties of heart tissue1,2. Current regeneration approaches explore the growth of cardiac tissue in vitro and the injection of stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes3–6 (CMs) but scientists struggle with low engraftment rates and marginal mechanical improvements, leaving the estimated 26 million patients suffering from heart failure worldwide without effective therapy7–9. One impediment to further progress is the limited ability to functionally monitor injected cells as currently available techniques and probes lack speed and sensitivity as well as single cell specificity. Here, we introduce microscopic whispering gallery mode (WGM) lasers into beating cardiomyocytes to realize all-optical recording of transient cardiac contraction profiles with cellular resolution. The brilliant emission and high spectral sensitivity of microlasers to local changes in refractive index enable long-term tracking of individual cardiac cells, monitoring of drug administration, and accurate measurements of organ scale contractility in live zebrafish. Our study reveals changes in sarcomeric protein density as underlying factor to cardiac contraction which is of fundamental importance for understanding the mechano-biology of cardiac muscle activation. The ability to non-invasively assess functional properties of transplanted cells and engineered cardiac tissue will stimulate the development of novel translational approaches and the in vivo monitoring of physiological parameters more broadly. Likewise, the use of implanted microlasers as cardiac sensors is poised to inspire the adaptation of the most advanced optical tools known to the microresonator community, like quantum-enhanced single-molecule biosensing or frequency comb spectroscopy10. ER -