AimsDiseased atria are characterized by functional and structural heterogeneities, adding to abnormal impulse generation and propagation. These heterogeneities are thought to lie at the origin of... Show moreAimsDiseased atria are characterized by functional and structural heterogeneities, adding to abnormal impulse generation and propagation. These heterogeneities are thought to lie at the origin of fractionated electrograms recorded during sinus rhythm (SR) in atrial fibrillation (AF) patients and are assumed to be involved in the onset and perpetuation (e.g. by re-entry) of this disorder. The underlying mechanisms, however, remain incompletely understood. Here, we tested whether regions of dense fibrosis could create an electrically isolated conduction pathway (EICP) in which re-entry could be established via ectopy and local block to become ‘trapped’. We also investigated whether this could generate local fractionated electrograms and whether the re-entrant wave could ‘escape’ and cause a global tachyarrhythmia due to dynamic changes at a connecting isthmus.Methods and resultsTo precisely control and explore the geometrical properties of EICPs, we used light-gated depolarizing ion channels and patterned illumination for creating specific non-conducting regions in silico and in vitro. Insight from these studies was used for complementary investigations in virtual human atria with localized fibrosis. We demonstrated that a re-entrant tachyarrhythmia can exist locally within an EICP with SR prevailing in the surrounding tissue and identified conditions under which re-entry could escape from the EICP, thereby converting a local latent arrhythmic source into an active driver with global impact on the heart. In a realistic three-dimensional model of human atria, unipolar epicardial pseudo-electrograms showed fractionation at the site of ‘trapped re-entry’ in coexistence with regular SR electrograms elsewhere in the atria. Upon escape of the re-entrant wave, acute arrhythmia onset was observed.ConclusionsTrapped re-entry as a latent source of arrhythmogenesis can explain the sudden onset of focal arrhythmias, which are able to transgress into AF. Our study might help to improve the effectiveness of ablation of aberrant cardiac electrical signals in clinical practice. Show less
Aim: Channelrhodopsins (ChRs) are a large family of light-gated ion channels with distinct properties, which is of great importance in the selection of a ChR variant for a given application.... Show moreAim: Channelrhodopsins (ChRs) are a large family of light-gated ion channels with distinct properties, which is of great importance in the selection of a ChR variant for a given application. However, data to guide such selection for cardiac optogenetic applications are lacking. Therefore, we investigated the functioning of different ChR variants in normal and pathological hypertrophic cardiomyocytes subjected to various illumination protocols.Methods and Results: Isolated neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes (NRVMs) were transduced with lentiviral vectors to express one of the following ChR variants: H134R, CatCh, ReaChR, or GtACR1. NRVMs were treated with phenylephrine (PE) to induce pathological hypertrophy (PE group) or left untreated [control (CTL) group]. In these groups, ChR currents displayed unique and significantly different properties for each ChR variant on activation by a single 1-s light pulse (1 mW/mm(2): 470, 565, or 617 nm). The concomitant membrane potential (V-m) responses also showed a ChR variant-specific profile, with GtACR1 causing a slight increase in average V-m during illumination (V-plateau: -38 mV) as compared with a V-plateau > -20 mV for the other ChR variants. On repetitive activation at increasing frequencies (10-ms pulses at 1-10 Hz for 30 s), peak currents, which are important for cardiac pacing, decreased with increasing activation frequencies by 17-78% (p < 0.05), while plateau currents, which are critical for arrhythmia termination, decreased by 10-75% (p < 0.05), both in a variant-specific manner. In contrast, the corresponding V-plateau remained largely stable. Importantly, current properties and V-m responses were not statistically different between the PE and CTL groups, irrespective of the variant used (p > 0.05).Conclusion: Our data show that ChR variants function equally well in cell culture models of healthy and pathologically hypertrophic myocardium but show strong, variant-specific use-dependence. This use-dependent nature of ChR function should be taken into account during the design of cardiac optogenetic studies and the interpretation of the experimental findings thereof. Show less
Homeostatic regulation protects organisms against hazardous physiological changes. However, such regulation is limited in certain organs and associated biological processes. For example, the heart... Show moreHomeostatic regulation protects organisms against hazardous physiological changes. However, such regulation is limited in certain organs and associated biological processes. For example, the heart fails to self-restore its normal electrical activity once disturbed, as with sustained arrhythmias. Here we present proof-of-concept of a biological self-restoring system that allows automatic detection and correction of such abnormal excitation rhythms. For the heart, its realization involves the integration of ion channels with newly designed gating properties into cardiomyocytes. This allows cardiac tissue to i) discriminate between normal rhythm and arrhythmia based on frequency-dependent gating and ii) generate an ionic current for termination of the detected arrhythmia. We show in silico, that for both human atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, activation of these channels leads to rapid and repeated restoration of normal excitation rhythm. Experimental validation is provided by injecting the designed channel current for arrhythmia termination in human atrial myocytes using dynamic clamp. Show less
AimsThe generation of homogeneous cardiomyocyte populations from fresh tissue or stem cells is laborious and costly. A potential solution to this problem would be to establish lines of immortalized... Show moreAimsThe generation of homogeneous cardiomyocyte populations from fresh tissue or stem cells is laborious and costly. A potential solution to this problem would be to establish lines of immortalized cardiomyocytes. However, as proliferation and (terminal) differentiation of cardiomyocytes are mutually exclusive processes, their permanent immortalization causes loss of electrical and mechanical functions. We therefore aimed at developing conditionally immortalized atrial myocyte (iAM) lines allowing toggling between proliferative and contractile phenotypes by a single-component change in culture medium composition.Methods and resultsFreshly isolated neonatal rat atrial cardiomyocytes (AMs) were transduced with a lentiviral vector conferring doxycycline (dox)-controlled expression of simian virus 40 large T antigen. Under proliferative conditions (i.e. in the presence of dox), the resulting cells lost most cardiomyocyte traits and doubled every 38 h. Under differentiation conditions (i.e. in the absence of dox), the cells stopped dividing and spontaneously reacquired a phenotype very similar to that of primary AMs (pAMs) in gene expression profile, sarcomeric organization, contractile behaviour, electrical properties, and response to ion channel-modulating compounds (as assessed by patch-clamp and optical voltage mapping). Moreover, differentiated iAMs had much narrower action potentials and propagated them at >10-fold higher speeds than the widely used murine atrial HL-1 cells. High-frequency electrical stimulation of confluent monolayers of differentiated iAMs resulted in re-entrant conduction resembling atrial fibrillation, which could be prevented by tertiapin treatment, just like in monolayers of pAMs.ConclusionThrough controlled expansion and differentiation of AMs, large numbers of functional cardiomyocytes were generated with properties superior to the differentiated progeny of existing cardiomyocyte lines. iAMs provide an attractive new model system for studying cardiomyocyte proliferation, differentiation, metabolism, and (electro)physiology as well as to investigate cardiac diseases and drug responses, without using animals. Show less
AIMS Sustained ventricular fibrillation (VF) is maintained by multiple stable rotors. Destabilization of sustained VF could be beneficial by affecting VF complexity (defined by the number of rotors... Show moreAIMS Sustained ventricular fibrillation (VF) is maintained by multiple stable rotors. Destabilization of sustained VF could be beneficial by affecting VF complexity (defined by the number of rotors). However, underlying mechanisms affecting VF stability are poorly understood. Therefore, the aim of this study was to correlate changes in arrhythmia complexity with changes in specific electrophysiological parameters, allowing a search for novel factors and underlying mechanisms affecting stability of sustained VF. METHODS AND RESULTS Neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocyte monolayers and Langendorff-perfused adult rat hearts were exposed to increasing dosages of the gap junctional uncoupler 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2-APB) to induce arrhythmias. Ion channel blockers/openers were added to study effects on VF stability. Electrophysiological parameters were assessed by optical mapping and patch-clamp techniques. Arrhythmia complexity in cardiomyocyte cultures increased with increasing dosages of 2-APB (n > 38), leading to sustained VF: 0.0 ± 0.1 phase singularities/cm(2) in controls vs. 0.0 ± 0.1, 1.0 ± 0.9, 3.3 ± 3.2, 11.0 ± 10.1, and 54.3 ± 21.7 in 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 µmol/L 2-APB, respectively. Arrhythmia complexity inversely correlated with wavelength. Lengthening of wavelength during fibrillation could only be induced by agents (BaCl(2)/BayK8644) increasing the action potential duration (APD) at maximal activation frequencies (minimal APD); 123 ± 32%/117 ± 24% of control. Minimal APD prolongation led to transient VF destabilization, shown by critical wavefront collision leading to rotor termination, followed by significant decreases in VF complexity and activation frequency (52%/37%). These key findings were reproduced ex vivo in rat hearts (n = 6 per group). CONCLUSION These results show that stability of sustained fibrillation is regulated by minimal APD. Minimal APD prolongation leads to transient destabilization of fibrillation, ultimately decreasing VF complexity, thereby providing novel insights into anti-fibrillatory mechanisms. Show less
AIMS Cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis are associated with potentially lethal arrhythmias. As these substrates often occur simultaneously in one patient, distinguishing between pro-arrhythmic... Show moreAIMS Cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis are associated with potentially lethal arrhythmias. As these substrates often occur simultaneously in one patient, distinguishing between pro-arrhythmic mechanisms is difficult. This hampers understanding of underlying pro-arrhythmic mechanisms and optimal treatment. This study investigates and compares arrhythmogeneity and underlying pro-arrhythmic mechanisms of either cardiac hypertrophy or fibrosis in in vitro models. METHODS AND RESULTS Fibrosis was mimicked by free myofibroblast (MFB) proliferation in neonatal rat ventricular monolayers. Cultures with inhibited MFB proliferation were used as control or exposed to phenylephrine to induce hypertrophy. At Day 9, cultures were studied with patch-clamp and optical-mapping techniques and assessed for protein expression. In hypertrophic (n = 111) and fibrotic cultures (n = 107), conduction and repolarization were slowed. Triggered activity was commonly found in these substrates and led to high incidences of spontaneous re-entrant arrhythmias [67.5% hypertrophic, 78.5% fibrotic vs. 2.9% in controls (n = 102)] or focal arrhythmias (39.1, 51.7 vs. 8.8%, respectively). Kv4.3 and Cx43 protein expression levels were decreased in hypertrophy but unaffected in fibrosis. Depolarization of cardiomyocytes (CMCs) was only found in fibrotic cultures (-48 ± 7 vs. -66 ± 7 mV in control, P < 0.001). L-type calcium-channel blockade prevented arrhythmias in hypertrophy, but caused conduction block in fibrosis. Targeting heterocellular coupling by low doses of gap-junction uncouplers prevented arrhythmias by accelerating repolarization only in fibrotic cultures. CONCLUSION Cultured hypertrophic or fibrotic myocardial tissues generated similar focal and re-entrant arrhythmias. These models revealed electrical remodelling of CMCs as a pro-arrhythmic mechanism of hypertrophy and MFB-induced depolarization of CMCs as a pro-arrhythmic mechanism of fibrosis. These findings provide novel mechanistic insight into substrate-specific arrhythmicity. Show less
Ypey, D.L.; Meerwijk, W.P.M. van; Umar, S.; Pijnappels, D.A.; Schalij, M.J.; Laarse, A. van der 2012
Depolarization-induced automaticity (DIA) of cardiomyocytes is the property of those cells to generate pacemaker cell-like spontaneous electrical activity when subjected to a depolarizing current.... Show moreDepolarization-induced automaticity (DIA) of cardiomyocytes is the property of those cells to generate pacemaker cell-like spontaneous electrical activity when subjected to a depolarizing current. This property provides a candidate mechanism for generation of pathogenic ectopy in cardiac tissue. The purpose of this study was to determine the biophysical mechanism of DIA in terms of the ion conductance properties of the cardiomyocyte membrane. First, we determined, by use of the conventional whole-cell patch-clamp technique, the membrane conductance and DIA properties of ventricular cardiomyocytes isolated from adult rat heart. Second, we reproduced and analysed DIA properties by using an adapted version of the experimentally based mathematical cardiomyocyte model of Pandit et al. (Biophys J 81:3029-3051 2001, Biophys J 84:832-841 2003) and Padmala and Demir (J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol 14:990-995 2003). DIA in 23 rat cardiomyocytes was a damped membrane potential oscillation with a variable number of action potentials and/or waves, depending on the strength of the depolarizing current and the particular cell. The adapted model was used to reconstruct the DIA properties of a particular cardiomyocyte from its whole-cell voltage-clamp currents. The main currents involved in DIA were an L-type calcium current (I (CaL)) and a slowly activating and inactivating Kv current (I (ss)), with linear (I (B)) and inward rectifier (I (K1)) currents acting as background currents and I (Na) and I (t) as modulators. Essential for DIA is a sufficiently large window current of a slowly inactivating I (CaL) combined with a critically sized repolarizing current I (ss). Slow inactivation of I (ss) makes DIA transient. In conclusion, we established a membrane mechanism of DIA primarily based on I (CaL), I (ss) and inward rectifier properties; this may be helpful in understanding cardiac ectopy and its treatment. Show less
Bingen, B.O.; Askar, S.F.A.; Ypey, D.L.; Laarse, A. van der; Schalij, M.J.; Pijnappels, D.A. 2012