Abstract

Intracellular calcium cycling is a vital component of cardiac excitation-contraction coupling. The key structures responsible for controlling calcium dynamics are the cell membrane (comprising the surface sarcolemma and transverse-tubules), the intracellular calcium store (the sarcoplasmic reticulum), and the co-localisation of these two structures to form dyads within which calcium-induced-calcium-release occurs. The organisation of these structures tightly controls intracellular calcium dynamics. In this study, we present a computational model of intracellular calcium cycling in three-dimensions (3-D), which incorporates high resolution reconstructions of these key regulatory structures, attained through imaging of tissue taken from the sheep left ventricle using serial block face scanning electron microscopy. An approach was developed to model the sarcoplasmic reticulum structure at the whole-cell scale, by reducing its full 3-D structure to a 3-D network of one-dimensional strands. The model reproduces intracellular calcium dynamics during control pacing and reveals the high-resolution 3-D spatial structure of calcium gradients and intracellular fluxes in both the cytoplasm and sarcoplasmic reticulum. We also demonstrated the capability of the model to reproduce potentially pro-arrhythmic dynamics under perturbed conditions, pertaining to calcium-transient alternans and spontaneous release events. Comparison with idealised cell models emphasised the importance of structure in determining calcium gradients and controlling the spatial dynamics associated with calcium-transient alternans, wherein the probabilistic nature of dyad activation and recruitment was constrained. The model was further used to highlight the criticality in calcium spark propagation in relation to inter-dyad distances. The model presented provides a powerful tool for future investigation of structure-function relationships underlying physiological and pathophysiological intracellular calcium handling phenomena at the whole-cell. The approach allows for the first time direct integration of high-resolution images of 3-D intracellular structures with models of calcium cycling, presenting the possibility to directly assess the functional impact of structural remodelling at the cellular scale.

Highlights

  • The cardiac intracellular calcium (Ca2+) handling system is responsible for the control of cellular and organ contraction associated with the heartbeat [1]

  • We demonstrate that the approaches developed are sufficient to capture spatio-temporal calcium dynamics with a realistic network SR structure and membrane fluxes distributed according to the sarcolemma/TTs

  • The action potential (AP) duration to 90% repolarisation (APD90) at this cycle length is 345ms and the Ca2+ transient has an upstroke time of 20ms, magnitude of 0.68μM and duration to 90% of peak of 400ms

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Summary

Introduction

The cardiac intracellular calcium (Ca2+) handling system is responsible for the control of cellular and organ contraction associated with the heartbeat [1]. During the cellular electrical action potential (AP) associated with excitation, an influx of Ca2+ through opening of the voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels (LTCCs—carrying flux JCaL) triggers a significant release of Ca2+ from the intracellular Ca2+ store (the sarcoplasmic reticulum, SR) through opening of the Ryanodine Receptors (RyRs—carrying flux Jrel). This process is referred to as Ca2+-induced- Ca2+-release (CICR) [5]. This completes the cardiac cellular Ca2+ cycle associated with electrical activation and contraction

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