Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Voltage and Calcium Dynamics Both Underlie Cellular Alternans in Cardiac Myocytes

Journal Title
Biophysical Journal
Keywords
Readers/Advisors
Journal Title
Term and Year
Publication Date
2014-05
Book Title
Publication Volume
106
Publication Issue
10
Publication Begin
2222
Publication End
2232
Number of pages
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
Cardiac alternans, a putative trigger event for cardiac reentry, is a beat-to-beat alternation in membrane potential and calcium transient. Alternans was originally attributed to instabilities in transmembrane ion channel dynamics (i.e., the voltage mechanism). As of this writing, the predominant view is that instabilities in subcellular calcium handling are the main underlying mechanism. That being said, because the voltage and calcium systems are bidirectionally coupled, theoretical studies have suggested that both mechanisms can contribute. To date, to our knowledge, no experimental evidence of such a dual role within the same cell has been reported. Here, a combined electrophysiological and calcium imaging approach was developed and used to illuminate the contributions of voltage and calcium dynamics to alternans. An experimentally feasible protocol, quantification of subcellular calcium alternans and restitution slope during cycle-length ramping alternans control, was designed and validated. This approach allows simultaneous illumination of the contributions of voltage and calcium-driven instability to total cellular instability as a function of cycle-length. Application of this protocol in in vitro guinea-pig left-ventricular myocytes demonstrated that both voltage- and calcium-driven instabilities underlie alternans, and that the relative contributions of the two systems change as a function of pacing rate.
Citation
Groenendaal W, Ortega FA, Krogh-Madsen T, Christini DJ. Voltage and calcium dynamics both underlie cellular alternans in cardiac myocytes. Biophys J. 2014 May 20;106(10):2222-32. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2014.03.048. PMID: 24853751; PMCID: PMC4052344.
Description
Accessibility Statement
Embedded videos