Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.

Heart arrhythmia is a pathological condition where the sequence of electrical impulses in the heart deviates from the normal rhythm. It is often associated with specific channelopathies in cardiac tissue, yet how precisely the changes in ionic channels affect the electrical activity of cardiac cells...

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Main Authors: Pia Rose, Jan-Hendrik Schleimer, Susanne Schreiber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236949
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spelling doaj-b5fb72a3529f4edaae5176f8086fc98e2021-03-03T22:03:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023694910.1371/journal.pone.0236949Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.Pia RoseJan-Hendrik SchleimerSusanne SchreiberHeart arrhythmia is a pathological condition where the sequence of electrical impulses in the heart deviates from the normal rhythm. It is often associated with specific channelopathies in cardiac tissue, yet how precisely the changes in ionic channels affect the electrical activity of cardiac cells is still an open question. Even though sodium channel mutations that underlie cardiac syndromes like the Long-Q-T and the Brugada-syndrome are known to affect a number of channel parameters simultaneously, previous studies have predominantly focused on the persistent late component of the sodium current as the causal explanation for an increased risk of heart arrhythmias in these cardiac syndromes. A systematic analysis of the impact of other important sodium channel parameters is currently lacking. Here, we investigate the reduced ten-Tusscher-model for single human epicardium ventricle cells and use mathematical bifurcation analysis to predict the dependence of the cardiac action potential on sodium channel activation and inactivation time-constants and voltage dependence. We show that, specifically, shifts of the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation curve can lead to drastic changes in the action potential dynamics, inducing oscillations of the membrane potential as well as bistability. Our results not only demonstrate a new way to induce multiple co-existing states of excitability (biexcitability) but also emphasize the critical role of the voltage dependence of sodium channel activation and inactivation curves for the induction of heart-arrhythmias.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236949
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pia Rose
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Susanne Schreiber
spellingShingle Pia Rose
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Susanne Schreiber
Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Pia Rose
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Susanne Schreiber
author_sort Pia Rose
title Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
title_short Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
title_full Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
title_fullStr Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
title_full_unstemmed Modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
title_sort modifications of sodium channel voltage dependence induce arrhythmia-favouring dynamics of cardiac action potentials.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Heart arrhythmia is a pathological condition where the sequence of electrical impulses in the heart deviates from the normal rhythm. It is often associated with specific channelopathies in cardiac tissue, yet how precisely the changes in ionic channels affect the electrical activity of cardiac cells is still an open question. Even though sodium channel mutations that underlie cardiac syndromes like the Long-Q-T and the Brugada-syndrome are known to affect a number of channel parameters simultaneously, previous studies have predominantly focused on the persistent late component of the sodium current as the causal explanation for an increased risk of heart arrhythmias in these cardiac syndromes. A systematic analysis of the impact of other important sodium channel parameters is currently lacking. Here, we investigate the reduced ten-Tusscher-model for single human epicardium ventricle cells and use mathematical bifurcation analysis to predict the dependence of the cardiac action potential on sodium channel activation and inactivation time-constants and voltage dependence. We show that, specifically, shifts of the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation curve can lead to drastic changes in the action potential dynamics, inducing oscillations of the membrane potential as well as bistability. Our results not only demonstrate a new way to induce multiple co-existing states of excitability (biexcitability) but also emphasize the critical role of the voltage dependence of sodium channel activation and inactivation curves for the induction of heart-arrhythmias.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236949
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