The ventricular conduction or His-Purkinje system (VCS) mediates the rapid propagation and precise delivery of electrical activity essential for the synchronization of heartbeats. Mutations in the transcription factor have been implicated in a high prevalence of developing ventricular conduction defects or arrhythmias with age. heterozygous mutant mice reproduce human phenotypes associated with a hypoplastic His-Purkinje system resulting from defective patterning of the Purkinje fiber network during development. Here, we investigated the role of in the mature VCS and the consequences of its loss on cardiac function. Neonatal deletion of in the VCS using a mouse line provoked apical hypoplasia and maturation defects of the Purkinje fiber network. Genetic tracing analysis demonstrated that neonatal -positive cells fail to maintain a conductive phenotype after deletion. Moreover, we observed a progressive loss of expression of fast-conduction markers in persistent Purkinje fibers. Consequently, -deleted mice developed conduction defects with progressively reduced QRS amplitude and RSR' complex associated with higher duration. Cardiac function recorded by MRI revealed a reduction in the ejection fraction in the absence of morphological changes. With age, these mice develop a ventricular diastolic dysfunction associated with dyssynchrony and wall-motion abnormalities without indication of fibrosis. These results highlight the requirement of postnatal expression of in the maturation and maintenance of a functional Purkinje fiber network to preserve contraction synchrony and cardiac function.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10219388 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcdd10050194 | DOI Listing |
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