| Literature DB >> 30429367 |
Mu Chen1,2, Dong-Zhu Xu1,3, Adonis Z Wu1, Shuai Guo1,4, Juyi Wan1,5, Dechun Yin1,4, Shien-Fong Lin1,6, Zhenhui Chen1, Michael Rubart-von der Lohe1,7, Thomas H Everett1, Zhilin Qu8, James N Weiss8, Peng-Sheng Chen1.
Abstract
The mechanisms of J wave syndrome (JWS) are incompletely understood. Here, we showed that the concomitant activation of small-conductance calcium-activated potassium (SK) current (IKAS) and inhibition of sodium current by cyclohexyl-[2-(3,5-dimethyl-pyrazol-1-yl)-6-methyl-pyrimidin-4-yl]-amine (CyPPA) recapitulate the phenotypes of JWS in Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts. CyPPA induced significant J wave elevation and frequent spontaneous ventricular fibrillation (SVF), as well as sinus bradycardia, atrioventricular block, and intraventricular conduction delay. IKAS activation by CyPPA resulted in heterogeneous shortening of action potential (AP) duration (APD) and repolarization alternans. CyPPA inhibited cardiac sodium current (INa) and decelerated AP upstroke and intracellular calcium transient. SVFs were typically triggered by short-coupled premature ventricular contractions, initiated with phase 2 reentry and originated more frequently from the right than the left ventricles. Subsequent IKAS blockade by apamin reduced J wave elevation and eliminated SVF. β-Adrenergic stimulation was antiarrhythmic in CyPPA-induced electrical storm. Like CyPPA, hypothermia (32.0°C) also induced J wave elevation and SVF. It facilitated negative calcium-voltage coupling and phase 2 repolarization alternans with spatial and electromechanical discordance, which were ameliorated by apamin. These findings suggest that IKAS activation contributes to the development of JWS in rabbit ventricles.Entities:
Keywords: Arrhythmias; Cardiology; Cardiovascular disease; Ion channels
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30429367 PMCID: PMC6302939 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.122329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708