Testing different food textures can support better care for people living with dysphagia.
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Image Caption: Prof. Catriona Steele, senior author of the study, pictured here analyzing a videofluoroscopy recording. This technique allows clinicians to observe swallowing in real time and gain insights to better guide dysphagia care.
People with swallowing difficulties, known as dysphagia, often rely on texture-modified foods, such as purées and thick liquids, to make eating safer and easier. However, these changes can reduce nutritional value and enjoyment, highlighting the need to reassess current dietary recommendations. Researchers from UHN’s KITE Research Institute found that different food textures can influence measures of swallowing timing and efficiency, offering new data to inform clinical assessments and care.
Using videofluoroscopy—a moving X-ray that shows how food travels through the throat in real time—the research team studied 20 healthy adults as they ate foods of different textures, as defined by the International Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative: minced and moist, soft and bite-sized, and regular solid food. The team measured how quickly the food moved through the throat, how effectively the throat muscles worked, and how much food was left behind (residue). They also assessed safety by checking whether any food entered the airway.
The findings showed that swallowing performance changed with texture. Foods with larger particles that required more chewing moved through the throat more slowly. Minced and moist foods moved the fastest, followed by soft and bite-sized foods, and then regular solids. Residue left behind after swallowing was highest for minced and moist and regular solids, and lowest for soft and bite-sized foods. Regardless of food texture, all participants swallowed safely, with no food entering the airway.
Importantly, the findings showed that evaluations of swallowing with thick liquids and purées are insufficient to predict how a person will swallow food. These smoother textures do not reflect how people eat in everyday life. This is a key finding as current assessments do not always include food. The researchers recommend that a solid food item, like a cracker, be routinely included in swallowing assessments to fully understand a person’s swallowing efficiency and muscle function.
Overall, the study suggests that solid food should be included in swallowing assessments to inform optimal diet texture recommendations. Although further research is needed in clinical populations, these findings may help guide more balanced approaches to dysphagia management that support safety and quality of life.
Pooja Gandhi, first author of the study, was a former PhD student in the lab of Prof. Catriona Steele. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Alberta.
Prof. Catriona Steele, senior author of the study, is a Senior Scientist at UHN’s KITE Research Institute and a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Swallowing and Food Oral Processing. She is also a Professor in the Department of Speech-Language Pathology and a Faculty Member of the Rehabilitation Sciences Institute at the University of Toronto
This work was supported by UHN Foundation, the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and the National Institute on Aging.
Prof. Steele is the developer of the ASPEKT Method of videofluoroscopy analysis, which was used in this study. She was also a board member of the International Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative from 2012 to 2023.
Gandhi P, Barrett E, Mancopes R, Panes V, Peladeau-Pigeon M, Simmons MM, Steele CM. What About Foods? The Influence of Food Texture on the Safety, Timing, Kinematics, and Efficiency of Pharyngeal Phase Swallowing in Healthy Adults. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2026 Apr 10. doi: 10.1044/2025_JSLHR-25-00546.
New diagnostic approach combining skin and blood tests could overhaul Parkinson disease care.
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Image Caption: When interpreted together, three biomarkers—4-repeat tau (4R-tau), neurofilament light chain (NfL), and α-synuclein—can help distinguish between Parkinson disease (PD) and related conditions. α-synuclein is commonly found in PD and multiple system atrophy (MSA), while 4R-tau is strongly associated with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). Higher levels of NfL in the blood reflect greater nerve cell damage and can help distinguish more aggressive conditions like MSA from PD. Together, these markers provide a more accurate picture than any single test alone.
With the emergence of new disease-modifying therapies that target the specific proteins responsible for neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease (PD), the timing and accuracy of diagnosis are increasingly important. Published in Nature Medicine, a new study led by Drs. Anthony Lang and Ivan Martinez-Valbuena at UHN’s Krembil Brain Institute (KBI), introduces a diagnostic approach that combines multiple biomarkers—biological molecules, often proteins, that can signal disease—to better distinguish between PD and similar neurodegenerative conditions called parkisonian syndromes. This approach could support earlier and more accurate diagnosis, and better care for patients as a result.
Current diagnostic methods often misclassify other parkinsonian syndromes, including progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and multiple system atrophy (MSA), as PD because of overlapping symptoms. This challenge is especially pronounced in early disease stages, when distinguishing clinical features are not yet present.
However, despite their similarities, these conditions are driven by different underlying proteins—and identifying which is key to improving diagnosis.
“Misdiagnosis means patients miss the opportunity to use disease-modifying therapies during the critical window in early disease stages when these treatments may have the greatest impact,” says Dr. Martinez-Valbuena, the first author of this study.
To address this issue, the KBI team developed a diagnostic protocol that integrates three biomarkers associated with parkinsonian syndromes: 4-repeat tau (4R-tau), neurofilament light chain (NfL), and α-synuclein. Each biomarker provides distinct information. α-synuclein identifies the abnormal protein build up seen in diseases like PD and MSA. 4R-tau signals the abnormal protein build up seen in PSP. NfL reflects the extent of damage to nerve cells. The new protocol uses a blood sample to measure NfL, and a single skin biopsy is to perform tests called seeding amplification assays (SAAs) to identify 4R-tau and α-synuclein. Although evaluation of α-synuclein is currently marketed diagnosis of PD, these diagnostic methods do not use SAAs.
The researchers first tested their approach in a sample of 166 participants—40 with PD, 77 with PSP, 29 with MSA, and 20 healthy controls. They then validated their findings in an independent cohort of 63 participants—35 with PD, 17 with PSP, nine with MSA, and two healthy controls. Participants in both groups varied in age and duration since disease onset.
Individually, each biomarker test showed high sensitivity and specificity. Skin tests detected α-synuclein in approximately 85% and 90% of people with PD and MSA, respectively, and 4R-tau in about 88% of people with PSP. Blood levels of NfL were lowest in healthy individuals and highest in people with MSA. The multimodal approach significantly outperformed the diagnostic accuracy—herein defined as the ability to correctly distinguish between MSA, PSP, and PD—of any single biomarker test on its own; receiving a performance score (AUC) of 0.96 for PD, 0.90 for MSA and 0.97 for PSP. AUC describes how well a model, the diagnostic protocol in this case, matches the data it is trying to explain. A perfect model has an AUC of 1.
Importantly, α-synuclein was found in about 23% of patients with PSP. This indicated that diagnostic testing that is limited to this protein, as some companies currently offer, is insufficient as it could misdiagnose PSP as PD.
Notably, the researchers also found that, in addition to better differentiating between PSP and other parkinsonian syndromes, combining biomarkers also enabled doctors to separate patients according to PSP severity.
To further validate the method, the KBI team compared the results from their diagnostic protocol with findings from brain tissue analysis in a subset of 11 participants. The diagnosis made using the integrated protocol consistently matched brain tissue findings, providing strong real-world validation of the approach. Importantly, in 1 case clinically diagnosed as having PSP—where the individual’s skin SAA tested negative both 4R tau and α-synuclein—brain tissue analysis later revealed a diagnosis of Alzheimer disease. This alternative diagnosis validated the negative skin SAA results.
While researchers emphasize that further testing is required—particularly in patients in earlier disease stages—the findings represent a promising advancement in the diagnosis of parkinsonian syndromes.
“Combining assessment of 4R-tau, NfL, and α-synuclein was a logical step,” says Dr. Lang, the study’s senior author. “These biomarkers complement each other—where one shows limitations, the others provide additional diagnostic value.”
“We are encouraged by the potential of this protocol to address gaps in the clinical evaluation of complex or unclear parkinsonian syndromes,” adds Dr. Martinez-Valbuena.
In addition to performance, the KBI team’s new diagnostic approach is also advantageous because it is less invasive than other approaches. The integrated approach uses a blood sample and one skin biopsy. This contrasts currently marketed testing for α-synuclein, which requires a cerebrospinal fluid sample obtained through a lumbar puncture or multiple skin biopsies. By simplifying sample collection and reducing reliance on specialized equipment and procedures, the integrated diagnostic protocol may make diagnostic testing more widely accessible.
For patients with PD, MSA, and PSP, earlier and more precise diagnosis could enable better disease management and, eventually, an improved quality of life. As new therapies continue to emerge, tools like this may help ensure patients receive the right care at the right time.
The first author of this study, Dr. Ivan Martinez-Valbuena, is a Scientific Associate at UHN’s Krembil Brain Institute.
The senior author of this study, Dr. Anthony E. Lang, is a Senior Scientist at UHN’s Krembil Brain Institute and a Professor at the University of Toronto's Temerty Faculty of Medicine and Institute of Medical Science. He is also the Lily Safra Chair in Movement Disorders, the Director of the Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease, Director of the Rossy PSP Centre, and the Jack Clark Chair for Parkinson’s Disease Research.
This work was supported by the Rossy Family Foundation, the Edmond J. Safra Philanthropic Foundation, the Maybank Foundation, the Blidner Family Foundation, Ajay Virmani, Jen Cerny, the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research., the Rainwater Charitable Foundation, the Bay Tree Foundation/Mohammad Al Zaibak Fellowships in Parkinson’s Disease, The Paul and Susan Hansen Foundation, the University Medical Center Goettingen-UMG Clinician Scientist Program, the Mohammad and Najla Al Zaibak Family Parkinson’s Disease Research Fund, the Fonds de Recherche du Québec Santé, and UHN Foundation.
Drs. Martinez-Valbuena, Kovacs, and Lang share a pending patent for movement disorders diagnostic assays, and Dr. Kovacs has a patent for the 5G4 synuclein antibody.
Dr. Martinez-Valbuena received consulting fees from Ferrer and research funding from the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research outside of this work.
Dr. Lang served as an advisor for AbbVie, Amylyx, Aprinoia, Biogen, BioAdvance, Biohaven, BioVie, BlueRock Therapeutics, Bristol Myers Squibb, Denali, EG427, Ferrer, Janssen, Lilly, Northera, Pharma 2B, Sun Pharma, UCB and Ventyx Bio. He also received honoraria from Sun Pharma and AbbVie and grants from Brain Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, the Parkinson Foundation, Parkinson Canada, and the Weston Foundation. Dr. Lang also serves as an expert witness in litigation related to paraquat and PD, and has received publishing royalties from Elsevier, Saunders, Wiley-Blackwell, Johns Hopkins Press, and Cambridge University Press.
For a full list of competing interests, see the publication.
Martinez-Valbuena I, Emamikhah M, Olszewska DA, Weber SK, Schnell S, Fereshtehnejad SM, Reyes NGD, Sousa M, Di Luca DG, Ta J, Anastassiadis C, Li J, Sasitharan J, Bhakta P, Visanji NP, Fox SH, Mollenhauer B, Tartaglia MC, Kovacs GG, Lang AE. Dermal α-Synuclein and 4R-Tau SAAs Combined with Serum NfL: Enhancing Diagnostic Precision in Neurodegenerative Parkinsonism. Nat Med. 2026 May 19. doi: 10.1038/s41591-026-04398-3
Study identifies molecular cues to improve development of pancreatic cells in the lab.
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Image Caption: Scientists are investigating ways to better refine how to develop specific pancreatic cell types in the lab. In doing so, this work contributes to ongoing efforts towards creating cell-based therapies for diabetes.
In a recent study from UHN’s McEwen Stem Cell Institute (McEwen), Senior Scientist Dr. M. Cristina Nostro and her team identified key factors that drive the development of various pancreatic cell types, like insulin-producing beta cells. This work aims to improve how stem cells can be used to develop a cellular therapy for type 1 diabetes.
During fetal development, pancreatic progenitors (PPs) are precursor cells that give rise to multiple pancreatic cell types, including exocrine and endocrine cells. Exocrine cells produce digestive enzymes, and endocrine (islet) cells, like beta cells, produce the hormones important for controlling blood sugar levels. The endocrine or exocrine fate of PPs is regulated by a complex set of biological signals, including the duration and timing of exposure to these biological signals.
Reproducing the developmental conditions that results in endocrine cells, including beta cells, in the lab is essential to the study of diabetes and the generation of new, cell-based therapies that could be used to replace a patient’s lost and nonfunctional beta cells. To achieve this, scientists use a technique called in vitro differentiation, in which they expose human pluripotent stem cells—cells that can become any cell type in the body—to key biological factors to guide their development into pancreatic islet cells.
However, knowledge of how PPs develop into specific lineages, such as islet cells, is still limited. As a result, differentiation toward pancreatic beta cells remains difficult to control and frequently produces other cell types, such as intestinal enterochromaffin cells (ECs), as unintended and unwanted byproducts.
To address this challenge, Dr. Nostro’s team modulated key signals used during differentiation towards pancreatic beta-like cells and analyzed the characteristics of the resulting cells over time. They also collaborated with Dr. Gabriela Pavlínková from the Czech Academy of Sciences to compare the process of fetal pancreatic cell development in a lab model to the process of in vitro pancreatic cell differentiation.
Researchers found that distinct populations of PPs preferentially develop into beta cells or EC cells. They identified several key regulatory proteins—including NKX6-1 and Neurogenin 3 (NGN3)—that influenced the fate of the progenitors.
Importantly, the McEwen showed that these PP populations respond differently to various developmental cues. By carefully adjusting these conditions in their differentiation protocol, the researchers were able to control which pancreatic cell type developed.
These findings may help refine stem cell differentiation protocols produce more consistent and defined cell populations. As cell-based therapies for type 1 diabetes advance to clinical trials, achieving precise control over differentiation outputs will be critical. “This work brings us closer to generating highly purified islet cell populations,” says Dr. Paraish Misra, first author of this study. “Purer populations can make this therapy safer and more effective for patients and streamline their production as they reduce the need to remove any non-beta cells from the cell population before transplantation into patients.” Overall, this work provides important insights that may support the development of more consistent and scalable cell-based therapies for diabetes.
The first author of this study is Dr. Paraish Misra, a former Postdoctoral Researcher in the Nostro Lab and currently an Assistant Professor and researcher at McGill University.
The senior author of this study is Dr. M. Cristina Nostro, a Senior Scientist at UHN’s McEwen Stem Cell Institute and Associate Professor in the Department of Physiology at the University of Toronto.
This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Howard Webster Foundation, the Kidney Foundation of Canada, the Canadian Society of Transplantation, the Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto, the Banting and Best Diabetes Centre, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Breakthrough T1D International (formerly JDRF), The Leona M. and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust, Eli Lilly Canada, the Canadian Islet Research Training Network, the Canadian Clinical Trial Network, the Czech Science Foundation, the Grant Agency of Charles University, the Czech Academy of Sciences, and UHN Foundation.
Drs. Misra, McGaugh, and Nostro are co-inventors on two patent applications related to this work.
Misra PS, McGaugh EC, Huang H, Cho A, Lin J, Sarangi F, Oakie A, Sambathkumar R, Song Y, Fabríciová V, Bohuslavová R, Pavlínková G, Nostro MC. Efficient control of enterochromaffin versus islet differentiation from human pluripotent stem cell-derived pancreatic progenitors. Nat Commun. 2026 Mar 18;17(1):4137. doi: 10.1038/s41467-026-70666-y. PMID: 41851084; PMCID: PMC13149693.
New lab-grown bile duct model helps researchers better understand disease progression.
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Image Caption: Microscopic image of a segment of bile duct in Dr. Ogawa’s model reveals cell cilia (red and green). DNA (blue) is visible in all cells. This new model may support the identification of more effective therapies and improve understanding of disease progression, with the potential to inform strategies that prevent advanced disease. (Image c/o Ogawa Lab)
A new lab-grown model of bile ducts inside the liver could help researchers better understand how biliary diseases develop and progress.
The biliary system—the part of the digestive system that includes the gallbladder, bile ducts, and parts of the liver—relies on a complex set of chemical and physical signals to function. Recreating this complexity in the lab has been a long-standing challenge, limiting researchers’ ability to understand how the system works and how diseases arise.
Now, Dr. Shinichiro Ogawa and a team at UHN’s McEwen Stem Cell Institute (McEwen) have developed a model that more closely reflects how the biliary system works than ever before. This advancement could help researchers to better study and eventually treat biliary diseases.
“To date, even advanced models of the bile ducts are not comprehensive,” says Dr. Ogawa, the study’s senior author. “Some models show how bile flow affects cell functioning. Others are better for studying what’s happening inside the cells. Our goal was to create a new 3D system that integrates all these features and allows us to better understand how cholangiocytes—bile duct cells—develop, function, and become diseased.”
To do this, the researchers used stem cells and a specialized system called an AngioPlate to generate three-dimensional bile ducts in the lab. They then assessed how well these structures functioned and responded to stress.
The new model recapitulated features of both healthy and diseased bile duct physiology. It included functional hallmarks such as cilia—hair-like structures that help move fluid through the ducts—and a network of supportive stromal cells that contribute to duct structure and function.
When exposed to disease-associated factors, such as bile acids and inflammatory molecules called cytokines, the model exhibited changes consistent with biliary diseases. These included impaired barrier integrity and bile leakage—key features of disease progression. Importantly, the platform also enabled the McEwen team to observe how disease unfolds over time, capturing multiple stages of its development.
By more accurately reflecting the complexity of the bile duct environment, this model offers a more realistic platform to study both healthy bile duct function and disease progression. It offers researchers a way to better understand how these tissues develop, respond to stress and injury, and fail. This new approach also lays the groundwork to enable patient-specific models, bringing us closer to more targeted treatments and improved outcomes for people with biliary diseases.
Britney Tian, a graduate student researcher at McEwen Stem Cell Institute, is the first author.
Dr. Shinichiro Ogawa is the senior author on this publication. He is a Scientist at UHN’s McEwen Stem Cell Institute and Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto’s Temerty Faculty of Medicine in the Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology.
This work was supported by the University of Toronto Medicine by Design initiative, the Canada First Research Excellence Fund, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, JSPS KAKENHI, the Stem Cell Network, and UHN Foundation.
For a list of competing interests, please see the publication.
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Tian B, Ogawa M, Kondo M, Langeveld G, Huan LJ, Zhang F, Hollinger A, Deir S, Bear C, Zhang B, Ogawa S. Bioengineered 3D hPSC-Cholangiocyte Ducts With Physiological Signals for Biliary Disease Modeling. Adv Healthc Mater. 2026 Mar 18:e05293. doi: 10.1002/adhm.202505293.
Scientists at UHN develop digital twins of human lungs using Ex Vivo Lung Perfusion data.
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Image Caption: Scientists are building “digital twins” of organs through the use of real-world data and AI, creating virtual lungs that accurately reflect the complexity of how a real human lung works. (Image: Ariadna Villalbi)
The concept of a “digital twin”—a virtual representation of physical objects, such as an organ—is emerging as a way to accelerate medical research and improve patient care. Researchers from UHN’s Toronto Lung Transplant Program within the Ajmera Transplant Centre have developed a digital twin of a human lung using data from Ex Vivo Lung Perfusion (EVLP).
In the medical field, digital twins are comprehensive computer models that integrate molecular, physiological, functional, and clinical data to create virtual representations of biological systems. However, due to the lack of large datasets that combine these different types of data, creating a digital twin for health research has been difficult to achieve.
EVLP is a biomedical technique in which a donated lung is preserved at normal body temperature, enabling the lung to breathe on its own outside of the body. Invented at UHN, EVLP enables clinicians to safely assess donor lungs before transplant. The lung function data generated during EVLP—spanning imaging, physiological monitoring, and molecular assays—serves as a foundation for the development of a digital twin for the human lung, or a “digital lung”.
The research team, led by Drs. Andrew Sage, Assistant Scientist, and Shaf Keshavjee, Chief of Innovation, Senior Scientist, and Donald K. Jackson Chair in Lung Transplant Research at UHN, analyzed the largest known EVLP dataset and developed a method to generate a digital lung. Their model accurately simulated over 75 parameters of lung biology and health, including physiology, biochemical and gene-expression markers.
To determine how effective the digital lung model could be in assessing therapeutic treatment results, the team compared real-world results from EVLP lungs treated with alteplase, a drug that dissolves blood clots, to predictions from the digital twin. Results showed that the digital lungs were better at assessing therapy in human lungs.
These findings show that virtual lungs can accurately simulate lung function and predict treatment outcomes. Digital twins could become a powerful tool for evaluating therapies, improving drug development, and ultimately improving patient care.
Xuanzi Zhou is a Doctoral Candidate at the University of Toronto and UHN and the first author of the study.
Dr. Andrew Sage, an Assistant Scientist at UHN and Assistant Professor in the Department of Surgery at the University of Toronto, is the co-senior author of the study.
Dr. Shaf Keshavjee is a Senior Scientist and Chief of Innovation at UHN. He is also a Professor of Thoracic Surgery and Biomedical Engineering and Vice Chair for Innovation in the Department of Surgery at the University of Toronto. He is the co-senior author of the study.
This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), the J.P. Bickell Foundation, and UHN Foundation.
Dr. Shaf Keshavjee serves as Chief Medical Officer of Traferox Technologies and receives personal fees from Lung Bioengineering, outside the submitted work. Xuanzi Zhou, Andrew, Sage, Shaf Keshavjee, and other authors declare ongoing patent applications with the University Health Network related to ex vivo digital twin machine learning models used in this study.
Zhou X, Wang B, Wei Y, Hacker S, Kim S, Borrillo T, McCaig A, Ahmed H, Ren Y, Hough O, Orsini L, Chao BT, McInnis M, Cypel M, Liu M, Yeung JC, Del Sorbo L, Keshavjee S, Sage AT. Digital twins of ex vivo human lungs enable accurate and personalized evaluation of therapeutic efficacy. Nat Biotechnol. 2026 May 4. doi:10.1038/s41587-026-03121-4.
UHN’s Toronto Western Hospital opens a new facility, expanding access to clinical research.
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Image Caption: (Pictured L-R) Dr. Sheila Riazi, Dr. Amit Oza, Dr. Susan Fox, Marnie Escaf, Dr. Carmela Tartaglia, Dr. Antonio Strafella, Briar Coman, and Anam Islam.
On March 12, 2026, UHN’s Toronto Western Hospital (TWH) celebrated the opening of the new TWH Centre for Clinical Research—an intentionally designed space that brings together supports for participants and researchers, making clinical research more accessible, coordinated, and patient-centred.
“The launch of the new Centre for Clinical Research is not simply the opening of a physical space,” says Clinical Vice President at UHN, Marnie Escaf. “It represents our commitment to the future of clinical research at Toronto Western Hospital, and our belief that research and clinical care should be integrated.”
Operated by the TWH Clinical Research Unit (CRU), the Centre expands the hospital’s capacity to conduct complex research protocols, early-phase clinical trials, and studies involving advanced treatment procedures.
For Dr. Carmela Tartaglia, Clinician Investigator at UHN’s Krembil Brain Institute (KBI) and Medical Lead of the Centre, this milestone marks an important step forward for patients facing challenging diagnoses.
“Many of our patients live with chronic diseases for which treatment options are limited. For patients and families, access to high-quality clinical research gives them hope,” says Dr. Tartaglia. “This Centre enables us to offer innovative clinical studies to patients and families more quickly and within a safe and well-supported environment.”
Located on the fifth floor of TWH’s West Wing, the Centre includes a welcoming reception area, private exam rooms, and a newly renovated treatment and monitoring space. With full integration with Epic, UHN’s electronic medical record system, and support from the TWH CRU, research teams and participants benefit from coordinated operations, streamlined workflows, and consistent standards of care. Centralizing these research services reduces pressure on care clinics and advances UHN’s Purpose of transforming lives and communities through excellence in care, discovery, and learning.
By providing dedicated space and infrastructure for clinical research, the Centre supports research teams that previously lacked access to resources to conduct a broader range of studies and advance new ideas across clinical programs. In doing so, it lays the foundation for the next generation of clinical trials at TWH.
Dr. Susan Fox, KBI Clinician Investigator and Co-Chair of the Clinical Research Collaborative Centre, emphasizes the broader vision, saying, “Better care begins with rigorous, real-world trials that address unmet needs. This Centre gives us the environment to do exactly that.”
For more information about the TWH Centre for Clinical Research, email TWHCRU@uhn.ca.
The construction of this facility was supported by UHN Foundation and Surgo Surgical Supply Inc., which donated medical equipment and furnishings.
The Toronto Western Hospital Centre for Clinical Research project team pictured in the main treatment room alongside images of the new Centre facilities.
Study reveals how mutations can trigger arrhythmias and cardiac arrest in a rare condition.
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Image Caption: In short QT syndrome, the electrical recovery of the heart muscle after each heart beat is accelerated and creates a risk of sudden arrhythmia.
Short QT syndrome (SQTS) is a rare, inherited condition that can cause sudden cardiac death. A new study from UHN, the University of Toronto, and collaborators in Germany provides insight into the molecular mechanisms behind SQTS using patient-derived lab models.
In SQTS, problems with the heart’s electrical system increase the risk of heart rhythm problems, called arrhythmias, which can lead to sudden death. Despite improved awareness and diagnosis of SQTS over the years, scientists still do not entirely understand the underlying molecular causes or how to optimally treatment the condition.
Several genes have been implicated in this condition, including SLC4A3 (Solute Carrier Family 4 Member 3)—involved in mediating the exchange of ions (charged atoms) across cell membranes and, ultimately, the pH inside cells. However, analyses of mutations in SLC4A3 have yet to explain how altered pH leads to arrhythmias and cardiac death.
To address this knowledge gap, the team examined two new SLC4A3 mutations by generating lab-grown models of cardiomyocytes—heart muscle cells—from patient samples. They found that in models with mutated SLC4A3, the disruption of ion movement across the cell membrane caused the cells to have a higher pH or be more alkaline. The increased pH resulted in a fewer calcium ions moving into the cells, which led to the shortening of the heart’s electrical recovery after each heart beat and irregular, arrhythmia-like beating.
This study reveals, for the first time, the mechanisms underlying SQTS related to pH imbalance and how SLC4A3 gene mutations lead to heart problems. These findings open the door to potential new, targeted drug treatments.
Dr. Michael Gollob is a Senior Scientist at UHN and a Professor in the Department of Physiology in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. He is the co-senior author of this study.
Dr. Ibrahim Akin, from the University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), University of Heidelberg, and Dr. Ibrahim El-Battrawy, from Ruhr University Bochum, are also co-senior authors of the study.
The first authors of the study are:
● Zenghui Meng – University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), University of Heidelberg
● Chen Yan – University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), University of Heidelberg
● Christina Holscher – University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), University of Heidelberg
● Boldizsar Kovacs – Inselspital University Hospital of Bern
● Saltanat Zhazykbayeva – Ruhr University Bochum
● Oliver Jarkas – Ruhr University Bochum
This work was supported by the Ian Copland Arrhythmia and Sudden Death Research Fund at the University of Toronto, the German Center for Cardiovascular Research, the Hector- Stiftung, Else-Kröner-Fresenius Foundation, German Heart Foundation, EU Horizon 2020 research and innovation program, and UHN Foundation.
See the manuscript for competing interests.
Meng Z, Kovacs B, Yan C, Hölscher C, Zhazykbayeva S, Jarkas O, Zou C, Cyganek L, Zorio E, Braza-Boils A, Pablo Ochoa J, Rehbehn N, Fan X, Lei X, Liu R, Tong S, Liu F, Xue Z, Bober SL, Zhao B, Duru F, Aweimer A, Köppel A, Burau K, Mügge A, Berger W, Hamdani N, Zhou X, Saguner AM, Akin I, Gollob MH, El-Battrawy I. SLC4A3-related short QT syndrome assessed in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes: mechanisms of ventricular arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death. Eur Heart J. 2026 Mar 5:ehag068. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehag068. Epub ahead of print.
Research conducted at UHN's research institutes spans the full spectrum of diseases and disciplines, including cancer, cardiovascular sciences, transplantation, neural and sensory sciences, musculoskeletal health, rehabilitation sciences, and community and population health.
Research at UHN is conducted under the umbrella of the following research institutes. Click below to learn more: