Literature DB >> 28964156

Regularity of beating of small clusters of embryonic chick ventricular heart-cells: experiment vs. stochastic single-channel population model.

Trine Krogh-Madsen1, Louise Kold Taylor2, Anne D Skriver2, Peter Schaffer3, Michael R Guevara2.   

Abstract

The transmembrane potential is recorded from small isopotential clusters of 2-4 embryonic chick ventricular cells spontaneously generating action potentials. We analyze the cycle-to-cycle fluctuations in the time between successive action potentials (the interbeat interval or IBI). We also convert an existing model of electrical activity in the cluster, which is formulated as a Hodgkin-Huxley-like deterministic system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations describing five individual ionic currents, into a stochastic model consisting of a population of ∼20 000 independently and randomly gating ionic channels, with the randomness being set by a real physical stochastic process (radio static). This stochastic model, implemented using the Clay-DeFelice algorithm, reproduces the fluctuations seen experimentally: e.g., the coefficient of variation (standard deviation/mean) of IBI is 4.3% in the model vs. the 3.9% average value of the 17 clusters studied. The model also replicates all but one of several other quantitative measures of the experimental results, including the power spectrum and correlation integral of the voltage, as well as the histogram, Poincaré plot, serial correlation coefficients, power spectrum, detrended fluctuation analysis, approximate entropy, and sample entropy of IBI. The channel noise from one particular ionic current (IKs), which has channel kinetics that are relatively slow compared to that of the other currents, makes the major contribution to the fluctuations in IBI. Reproduction of the experimental coefficient of variation of IBI by adding a Gaussian white noise-current into the deterministic model necessitates using an unrealistically high noise-current amplitude. Indeed, a major implication of the modelling results is that, given the wide range of time-scales over which the various species of channels open and close, only a cell-specific stochastic model that is formulated taking into consideration the widely different ranges in the frequency content of the channel-noise produced by the opening and closing of several different types of channels will be able to reproduce precisely the various effects due to membrane noise seen in a particular electrophysiological preparation.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28964156     DOI: 10.1063/1.5001200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chaos        ISSN: 1054-1500            Impact factor:   3.642


  4 in total

1.  Nonlinear dynamics of two-dimensional cardiac action potential duration mapping model with memory.

Authors:  M Kesmia; S Boughaba; S Jacquir
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2019-01-01       Impact factor: 2.259

Review 2.  Biological noise is a key determinant of the reproducibility and adaptability of cardiac pacemaking and EC coupling.

Authors:  Laura Guarina; Ariana Neelufar Moghbel; Mohammad S Pourhosseinzadeh; Robert H Cudmore; Daisuke Sato; Colleen E Clancy; Luis Fernando Santana
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  2022-04-28       Impact factor: 4.000

3.  Sinoatrial Beat to Beat Variability Assessed by Contraction Strength in Addition to the Interbeat Interval.

Authors:  Helmut Ahammer; Susanne Scheruebel; Robert Arnold; Michael Mayrhofer-Reinhartshuber; Petra Lang; Ádám Dolgos; Brigitte Pelzmann; Klaus Zorn-Pauly
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2018-05-18       Impact factor: 4.566

Review 4.  Impact of Chronic Fetal Hypoxia and Inflammation on Cardiac Pacemaker Cell Development.

Authors:  Martin G Frasch; Dino A Giussani
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2020-03-17       Impact factor: 6.600

  4 in total

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