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A Dynamical Threshold for Cardiac Delayed Afterdepolarization-Mediated Triggered Activity

Authors :
Zhen Song
Christopher Y. Ko
James N. Weiss
Michael B. Liu
Zhilin Qu
Alan Garfinkel
Source :
Liu, MB; Ko, CY; Song, Z; Garfinkel, A; Weiss, JN; & Qui, Z. (2016). A Dynamical Threshold for Cardiac Delayed Afterdepolarization-Mediated Triggered Activity. BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 111(11), 2523-2533. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2016.10.009. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2jq0r0vj, Biophysical journal, vol 111, iss 11
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Ventricular myocytes are excitable cells whose voltage threshold for action potential (AP) excitation is ∼-60mV at which INa is activated to give rise to a fast upstroke. Therefore, for a short stimulus pulse to elicit an AP, a stronger stimulus is needed if the resting potential lies further away from the INa threshold, such as in hypokalemia. However, for an AP elicited by a long duration stimulus or a diastolic spontaneous calcium release, we observed that the stimulus needed was lower in hypokalemia than in normokalemia in both computer simulations and experiments of rabbit ventricular myocytes. This observation provides insight into why hypokalemia promotes calcium-mediated triggered activity, despite the resting potential lying further away from the INa threshold. To understand the underlying mechanisms, we performed bifurcation analyses and demonstrated that there is a dynamical threshold, resulting from a saddle-node bifurcation mainly determined by IK1 and INCX. This threshold is close to the voltage at which IK1 is maximum, and lower than the INa threshold. After exceeding this dynamical threshold, the membrane voltage will automatically depolarize above the INa threshold due to the large negative slope of the IK1-V curve. This dynamical threshold becomes much lower in hypokalemia, especially with respect to calcium, as predicted by our theory. Because of the saddle-node bifurcation, the system can automatically depolarize even in the absence of INa to voltages higher than the ICa,L threshold, allowing for triggered APs in single myocytes with complete INa block. However, because INa is important for AP propagation in tissue, blocking INa can still suppress premature ventricular excitations in cardiac tissue caused by calcium-mediated triggered activity. This suppression is more effective in normokalemia than in hypokalemia due to the difference in dynamical thresholds.

Details

ISSN :
00063495
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c055d369e080ca6750aff420636c6b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2016.10.009