Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide due in a large part to arrhythmia. In order to understand how calcium dynamics play a role in arrhythmogenesis, normal and dysfunctional Ca signaling in a subcellular, cellular, and tissued level is examined using cardiac ventricular myocytes at a high temporal and spatial resolution using multiscale computational modeling. Ca sparks underlie normal excitation-contraction coupling. However, under pathological conditions, Ca sparks can combine to form Ca waves. These propagating elevations of (Ca) can activate an inward Na-Ca exchanger current (I) that contributes to early after-depolarization (EADs) and delayed after-depolarizations (DADs). However, how cellular currents lead to full depolarization of the myocardium and how they initiate extra systoles is still not fully understood. This study explores how many myocytes must be entrained to initiate arrhythmogenic depolarizations in biophysically detailed computational models. The model presented here suggests that only a small number of myocytes must activate in order to trigger an arrhythmogenic propagating action potential. These conditions were examined in 1-D, 2-D, and 3-D considering heart geometry. The depolarization of only a few hundred ventricular myocytes is required to trigger an ectopic depolarization. The number decreases under disease conditions such as heart failure. Furthermore, in geometrically restricted parts of the heart such as the thin muscle strands found in the trabeculae and papillary muscle, the number of cells needed to trigger a propagating depolarization falls even further to less than ten myocytes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11121878 | DOI Listing |
Int J Mol Sci
December 2024
Life Science Division, Yamaguchi University Advanced Technology Institute, Ube 755-8505, Japan.
The combination of alcohol and a low-carbohydrate, high-protein, high-fat atherogenic diet (AD) increases the risk of lethal arrhythmias in apolipoprotein E/low-density lipoprotein receptor double-knockout (AL) mice with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). This study investigates whether left ventricular (LV) myocardial interstitial fibrosis (MIF), formed during the progression of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), contributes to this increased risk. Male AL mice were fed an AD with or without ethanol for 16 weeks, while age-matched AL and wild-type mice served as controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
January 2025
Hannover Medical School, Institute of Functional and Applied Anatomy, 30625 Hanover, Germany.
Small mammals have a higher heart rate and, relative to body mass (Mb), a higher metabolic rate than large mammals. In contrast, heart weight and stroke volume scale linearly with Mb. With mitochondria filling approximately 50% of a shrew cardiomyocyte - space unavailable for myofibrils - it is unclear how small mammals generate enough contractile force to pump blood into circulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKardiologiia
December 2024
Research Institute of Cardiology, Branch of the Tomsk National Research Medical Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Tomsk.
Aim: Comparative assessment of structural changes in cardiomyocyte mitochondria of the right atrial appendage and the mitochondrial respiratory function in peripheral blood leukocytes in a cohort of patients after acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) and with stable chronic heart failure of ischemic etiology with reduced ejection fraction (CHFrEF) or moderately reduced ejection fraction (CHFmrEF) of the left ventricle.
Material And Methods: The study analyzed 40 micrographs of right atrial appendage cardiomyocytes obtained from 12 patients with CHFrEF and CHFmrEF. The study protocol was registered on ClinicalTrials.
Elife
January 2025
Department of Pharmacology (The Key Laboratory of Cardiovascular Research, Ministry of Education) at College of Pharmacy, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China.
Dystrophin is a critical interacting protein of Nav1.5 that determines its membrane anchoring in cardiomyocytes. Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are involved in the regulation of cardiac ion channels, while their influence on sodium channels remains unexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
December 2024
Institute of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Biochemical and Pharmacological Center (BPC) Marburg, University of Marburg, 35032 Marburg, Germany.
encodes the α1c subunit of the L-type Ca channel, Cav1.2. Ventricular myocytes from haploinsufficient () rats exhibited reduced expression of Cav1.
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