Abstract

IntroductionDrug-induced proarrhythmic potential is an important regulatory criterion in safety pharmacology. The application of in silico approaches to predict proarrhythmic potential of new compounds is under consideration as part of future guidelines. Current approaches simulate the electrophysiology of a single human adult ventricular cardiomyocyte. However, drug-induced proarrhythmic potential can be different when cardiomyocytes are surrounded by non-muscle cells. Incorporating fibroblasts in models of myocardium is important particularly for predicting a drugs cardiac liability in the aging population – a growing population who take more medications and exhibit increased cardiac fibrosis. In this study, we used computational models to investigate the effects of fibroblast coupling on the electrophysiology and response to drugs of cardiomyocytes. MethodsA computational model of cardiomyocyte electrophysiology and ion handling (O'Hara, Virag, Varro, & Rudy, 2011) is coupled to a passive model of fibroblast electrophysiology to test the effects of three compounds that block cardiomyocyte ion channels. Results are compared to model results without fibroblast coupling to see how fibroblasts affect cardiomyocyte action potential duration at 90% repolarization (APD90) and propensity for early after depolarization (EAD). ResultsSimulation results show changes in cardiomyocyte APD90 with increasing concentration of three drugs that affect cardiac function (dofetilide, vardenafil and nebivolol) when no fibroblasts are coupled to the cardiomyocyte. Coupling fibroblasts to cardiomyocytes markedly shortens APD90. Moreover, increasing the number of fibroblasts can augment the shortening effect. DiscussionCoupling cardiomyocytes and fibroblasts are predicted to decrease proarrhythmic susceptibility under dofetilide, vardenafil and nebivolol block. However, this result is sensitive to parameters which define the electrophysiological function of the fibroblast. Fibroblast membrane capacitance and conductance (CFB and GFB) have less of an effect on APD90 than the fibroblast resting membrane potential (EFB). This study suggests that in both theoretical models and experimental tissue constructs that represent cardiac tissue, both cardiomyocytes and non-muscle cells should be considered when testing cardiac pharmacological agents.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call