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A study of the outward background current conductance gK1, the pacemaker current conductance gf, and the gap junction conductance gj as determinants of biological pacing in single cells and in a two-cell syncytium using the dynamic clamp
We previously demonstrated that a two-cell syncytium, composed of a ventricular myocyte and an mHCN2 expressing cell, recapitulated most properties of in vivo biological pacing induced by mHCN2-transfected hMSCs in the canine ventricle. Here, we use the two-cell syncytium, employing dynamic clamp, t...
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Published in: | Pflügers Archiv 2020-05, Vol.472 (5), p.561-570 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | We previously demonstrated that a two-cell syncytium, composed of a ventricular myocyte and an mHCN2 expressing cell, recapitulated most properties of in vivo biological pacing induced by mHCN2-transfected hMSCs in the canine ventricle. Here, we use the two-cell syncytium, employing dynamic clamp, to study the roles of
g
f
(pacemaker conductance),
g
K1
(background K
+
conductance), and
g
j
(intercellular coupling conductance) in biological pacing. We studied
g
f
and
g
K1
in single HEK293 cells expressing cardiac sodium current channel Na
v
1.5 (SCN5A). At fixed
g
f
, increasing
g
K1
hyperpolarized the cell and initiated pacing. As
g
K1
increased, rate increased, then decreased, finally ceasing at membrane potentials near E
K
. At fixed
g
K1
, increasing
g
f
depolarized the cell and initiated pacing. With increasing
g
f
, rate increased reaching a plateau, then decreased, ceasing at a depolarized membrane potential. We studied
g
j
via virtual coupling with two non-adjacent cells, a driver (HEK293 cell) in which
g
K1
and
g
f
were injected without SCN5A and a follower (HEK293 cell), expressing SCN5A. At the chosen values of
g
K1
and
g
f
oscillations initiated in the driver, when
g
j
was increased synchronized pacing began, which then decreased by about 35% as
g
j
approached 20 nS. Virtual uncoupling yielded similar insights into
g
j
. We also studied subthreshold oscillations in physically and virtually coupled cells. When coupling was insufficient to induce pacing, passive spread of the oscillations occurred in the follower. These results show a non-monotonic relationship between
g
K1
,
g
f
,
g
j
, and pacing. Further, oscillations can be generated by
g
K1
and
g
f
in the absence of SCN5A. |
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ISSN: | 0031-6768 1432-2013 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00424-020-02378-1 |