Simulations in a canine ventricular myocyte model showed that combined CaMKII inhibition and I(Kr) enhancement suppresses action potential duration alternans, suggesting an antiarrhythmic effect.
Does CaMKII inhibition and IKr enhancement suppress CaT and APD alternans in a canine ventricular myocyte model?
Mathematical modeling suggests that combined CaMKII inhibition and IKr enhancement may serve as an antiarrhythmic intervention by suppressing action potential duration and calcium transient alternans.
Alternans of cardiac repolarization is associated with arrhythmias and sudden death. At the cellular level, alternans involves beat-to-beat oscillation of the action potential (AP) and possibly Ca(2+) transient (CaT). Because of experimental difficulty in independently controlling the Ca(2+) and electrical subsystems, mathematical modeling provides additional insights into mechanisms and causality. Pacing protocols were conducted in a canine ventricular myocyte model with the following results: 1) CaT alternans results from refractoriness of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) release system; alternation of the L-type calcium current has a negligible effect; 2) CaT-AP coupling during late AP occurs through the sodium-calcium exchanger and underlies AP duration (APD) alternans; 3) increased Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) activity extends the range of CaT and APD alternans to slower frequencies and increases alternans magnitude; its decrease suppresses CaT and APD alternans, exerting an antiarrhythmic effect; and 4) increase of the rapid delayed rectifier current (I(Kr)) also suppresses APD alternans but without suppressing CaT alternans. Thus CaMKII inhibition eliminates APD alternans by eliminating its cause (CaT alternans) while I(Kr) enhancement does so by weakening CaT-APD coupling. The simulations identify combined CaMKII inhibition and I(Kr) enhancement as a possible antiarrhythmic intervention.
Livshitz et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Cardiac repolarization alternans. CaMKII inhibition and I(Kr) enhancement (simulated) was evaluated on CaT and APD alternans. Simulations in a canine ventricular myocyte model showed that combined CaMKII inhibition and I(Kr) enhancement suppresses action potential duration alternans, suggesting an antiarrhythmic effect.
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