Dynamic clamping human and rabbit atrial calcium current: narrowing I CaL window abolishes early afterdepolarizations
Early-afterdepolarizations (EADs) are abnormal action potential oscillations and a known cause of cardiac arrhythmias. Ventricular EADs involve reactivation of a Ca current (I ) in its 'window region' voltage range. However, electrical mechanisms of atrial EADs, a potential cause of atrial...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2019-07, Vol.597 (14), p.3619-3638 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Early-afterdepolarizations (EADs) are abnormal action potential oscillations and a known cause of cardiac arrhythmias. Ventricular EADs involve reactivation of a Ca
current (I
) in its 'window region' voltage range. However, electrical mechanisms of atrial EADs, a potential cause of atrial fibrillation, are poorly understood. Atrial cells were obtained from consenting patients undergoing heart surgery, as well as from rabbits. I
was blocked with nifedipine and then a hybrid patch clamp/mathematical-modelling technique, 'dynamic clamping', was used to record action potentials at the same time as injecting an artificial, modifiable, I
(I
). Progressively widening the I
window region produced EADs of various types, dependent on window width. EAD production was strongest upon moving the activation (vs. inactivation) side of the window. EADs were then induced by a different method: increasing I
amplitude and/or K
channel-blockade (4-aminopyridine). Narrowing of the I
window by ∼10 mV abolished these EADs. Atrial I
window narrowing is worthy of further testing as a potential anti-atrial fibrillation drug mechanism.
Atrial early-afterdepolarizations (EADs) may contribute to atrial fibrillation (AF), perhaps involving reactivation of L-type Ca
current (I
) in its window region voltage range. The present study aimed (i) to validate the dynamic clamp technique for modifying the I
contribution to atrial action potential (AP) waveform; (ii) to investigate the effects of widening the window I
on EAD-propensity; and (iii) to test whether EADs from increased I
and AP duration are supressed by narrowing the window I
. I
and APs were recorded from rabbit and human atrial myocytes by whole-cell-patch clamp. During AP recording, I
was inhibited (3 µm nifedipine) and replaced by a dynamic clamp model current, I
(tuned to native I
characteristics), computed in real-time (every 50 µs) based on myocyte membrane potential. I
-injection restored the nifedipine-suppressed AP plateau. Widening the window I
, symmetrically by stepwise simultaneous equal shifts of half-voltages (V
) of I
activation (negatively) and inactivation (positively), generated EADs (single, multiple or preceding repolarization failure) in a window width-dependent manner, as well as AP alternans. A stronger EAD-generating effect resulted from independently shifting activation V
(asymmetrical widening) than inactivation V
; for example, a 15 mV activation shift produced EADs in nine of 17 (53%) human atrial myoc |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/JP277827 |