Rapidly activating I(Kr) provides a delayed voltage-dependent outward transient during ventricular repolarization, consistent with rapid recovery from inactivation.
The rapidly activating delayed rectifier current (IKr) provides a delayed voltage-dependent outward transient during ventricular repolarization, with heterogeneous voltage dependence that may modulate its contribution.
Although inactivation of the rapidly activating delayed rectifier current (I(Kr)) limits outward current on depolarization, the role of I(Kr) (and recovery from inactivation) during repolarization is uncertain. To characterize I(Kr) during ventricular repolarization (and compare with the inward rectifier current, I(K1)), voltage-clamp waveforms simulating the action potential were applied to canine ventricular, atrial, and Purkinje myocytes. In ventricular myocytes, I(Kr) was minimal at plateau potentials but transiently increased during repolarizing ramps. The I(Kr) transient was unaffected by repolarization rate and maximal after 150-ms depolarizations (+25 mV). Action potential clamps revealed the I(Kr) transient terminating the plateau. Although peak I(Kr) transient density was relatively uniform among myocytes, potentials characterizing the peak transients were widely dispersed. In contrast, peak inward rectifier current (I(K1)) density during repolarization was dispersed, whereas potentials characterizing I(K1) defined a narrower (more negative) voltage range. In summary, rapidly activating I(Kr) provides a delayed voltage-dependent (and functionally time-independent) outward transient during ventricular repolarization, consistent with rapid recovery from inactivation. The heterogeneous voltage dependence of I(Kr) provides a novel means for modulating the contribution of this current during repolarization.
Gary A. Gintant (Wed,) reported a other. Voltage-clamp waveforms simulating the action potential vs. Inward rectifier current (I(K1)) was evaluated on Characterization of I(Kr) during ventricular repolarization. Rapidly activating I(Kr) provides a delayed voltage-dependent outward transient during ventricular repolarization, consistent with rapid recovery from inactivation.