Cell coupling between ventricular myocyte pairs from connexin43-deficient murine hearts.

Circ Res

Department of Pharmacology and Center for Molecular Therapeutics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032, USA.

Published: October 2003

Mice with cardiac-restricted inactivation of the connexin43 gene (CKO mice) have moderate slowing of ventricular conduction and lethal arrhythmias. Mechanisms through which propagation is maintained in the absence of Cx43 are unknown. We evaluated gap junctional conductance in CKO ventricular pairs using dual patch clamp methods. Junctional coupling was reduced to 4+/-2 nS (side-to-side) and 11+/-2 nS (end-to-end), including 21% of cell-pairs with no detectable coupling, compared with 588+/-104 nS (side-to-side) and 558+/-92 nS (end-to-end) in control cell-pairs. Voltage dependence of control gap junctions was characteristic of Cx43. CKO conductance showed increased voltage dependence, suggesting low-level expression of other connexin isoforms. From theoretical models, this degree of CKO coupling is not expected to support levels of conduction persisting in vivo, suggesting the possibility that there are additional mechanisms for maintained propagation when gap junctional conductance is severely reduced.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000095977.66660.86DOI Listing

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