Channelpedia

PubMed 20947828


Referenced in: none

Automatically associated channels: Kv11.1



Title: A major role for HERG in determining frequency of reentry in neonatal rat ventricular myocyte monolayer.

Authors: Luqia Hou, Makarand Deo, Philip Furspan, Sandeep V Pandit, Sergey Mironov, David S Auerbach, Qiuming Gong, Zhengfeng Zhou, Omer Berenfeld, José Jalife

Journal, date & volume: Circ. Res., 2010 Dec 10 , 107, 1503-11

PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20947828


Abstract
the rapid delayed rectifier potassium current, I(Kr), which flows through the human ether-a-go-go-related (hERG) channel, is a major determinant of the shape and duration of the human cardiac action potential (APD). However, it is unknown whether the time dependency of I(Kr) enables it to control APD, conduction velocity (CV), and wavelength (WL) at the exceedingly high activation frequencies that are relevant to cardiac reentry and fibrillation.to test the hypothesis that upregulation of hERG increases functional reentry frequency and contributes to its stability.using optical mapping, we investigated the effects of I(Kr) upregulation on reentry frequency, APD, CV, and WL in neonatal rat ventricular myocyte (NRVM) monolayers infected with GFP (control), hERG (I(Kr)), or dominant negative mutant hERG G628S. Reentry frequency was higher in the I(Kr)-infected monolayers (21.12 ± 0.8 Hz; n=43 versus 9.21 ± 0.58 Hz; n=16; P<0.001) but slightly reduced in G628S-infected monolayers. APD(80) in the I(Kr)-infected monolayers was shorter (>50%) than control during pacing at 1 to 5 Hz. CV was similar in both groups at low frequency pacing. In contrast, during high-frequency reentry, the CV measured at varying distances from the center of rotation was significantly faster in I(Kr)-infected monolayers than controls. Simulations using a modified NRVM model predicted that rotor acceleration was attributable, in part, to a transient hyperpolarization immediately following the AP. The transient hyperpolarization was confirmed experimentally.hERG overexpression dramatically accelerates reentry frequency in NRVM monolayers. Both APD and WL shortening, together with transient hyperpolarization, underlies the increased rotor frequency and stability.