Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes

A wide range of arrhythmogenic phenotypes have been associated with heterogeneous mechanical dyskinesis. Pro-arrhythmic effects are often associated with dysregulated intra-cellular calcium handling, especially via the development of intra- and inter-cellular calcium waves. Experimental evidence sug...

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Main Authors: Viviane Timmermann, Andrew D. McCulloch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2020.519951/full
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spelling doaj-92c44e5403204b9789c9db74eac53eee2020-12-10T06:38:19ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2020-12-011110.3389/fphys.2020.519951519951Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled MyocytesViviane Timmermann0Viviane Timmermann1Andrew D. McCulloch2Simula Research Laboratory, Department of Computational Physiology, Fornebu, NorwayDepartments of Bioengineering and Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United StatesDepartments of Bioengineering and Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United StatesA wide range of arrhythmogenic phenotypes have been associated with heterogeneous mechanical dyskinesis. Pro-arrhythmic effects are often associated with dysregulated intra-cellular calcium handling, especially via the development of intra- and inter-cellular calcium waves. Experimental evidence suggests that mechanical strain can contribute to the generation and maintenance of these calcium waves via a variety of mechano-electric coupling mechanisms. Most model studies of mechano-electric coupling mechanisms have been focused on mechano-sensitive ion channels, even though experimental studies have shown that intra- and inter-cellular calcium waves triggered by mechanical perturbations are likely to be more prevalent pro-arrhythmic mechanisms in the diseased heart. A one-dimensional strongly coupled computational model of electromechanics in rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes showed that specific myocyte stretch sequences can modulate the susceptibility threshold for delayed after-depolarizations. In simulations of mechanically-triggered calcium waves in cardiomyocytes coupled to fibroblasts, susceptibility to calcium wave propagation was reduced as the current through the gap junction caused current drain from the myocytes. In 1D multi-cellular arrays coupled via gap junctions, mechanically-induced waves may contribute to synchronizing arrhythmogenic calcium waves and after-depolarizations.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2020.519951/fullmechno-electric feedbackintracellular calcium releasearrhythmiacalcium wavescomputational modelrabbit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Viviane Timmermann
Viviane Timmermann
Andrew D. McCulloch
spellingShingle Viviane Timmermann
Viviane Timmermann
Andrew D. McCulloch
Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
Frontiers in Physiology
mechno-electric feedback
intracellular calcium release
arrhythmia
calcium waves
computational model
rabbit
author_facet Viviane Timmermann
Viviane Timmermann
Andrew D. McCulloch
author_sort Viviane Timmermann
title Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
title_short Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
title_full Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
title_fullStr Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
title_full_unstemmed Mechano-Electric Coupling and Arrhythmogenic Current Generation in a Computational Model of Coupled Myocytes
title_sort mechano-electric coupling and arrhythmogenic current generation in a computational model of coupled myocytes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description A wide range of arrhythmogenic phenotypes have been associated with heterogeneous mechanical dyskinesis. Pro-arrhythmic effects are often associated with dysregulated intra-cellular calcium handling, especially via the development of intra- and inter-cellular calcium waves. Experimental evidence suggests that mechanical strain can contribute to the generation and maintenance of these calcium waves via a variety of mechano-electric coupling mechanisms. Most model studies of mechano-electric coupling mechanisms have been focused on mechano-sensitive ion channels, even though experimental studies have shown that intra- and inter-cellular calcium waves triggered by mechanical perturbations are likely to be more prevalent pro-arrhythmic mechanisms in the diseased heart. A one-dimensional strongly coupled computational model of electromechanics in rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes showed that specific myocyte stretch sequences can modulate the susceptibility threshold for delayed after-depolarizations. In simulations of mechanically-triggered calcium waves in cardiomyocytes coupled to fibroblasts, susceptibility to calcium wave propagation was reduced as the current through the gap junction caused current drain from the myocytes. In 1D multi-cellular arrays coupled via gap junctions, mechanically-induced waves may contribute to synchronizing arrhythmogenic calcium waves and after-depolarizations.
topic mechno-electric feedback
intracellular calcium release
arrhythmia
calcium waves
computational model
rabbit
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2020.519951/full
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AT andrewdmcculloch mechanoelectriccouplingandarrhythmogeniccurrentgenerationinacomputationalmodelofcoupledmyocytes
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