Abstract

Voltage-activated outward K(+) currents (I (Kv)) are essential for cardiac repolarization and are major factors in the electrophysiological remodeling and arrhythmias seen in heart disease. Mouse models have been useful for understanding cardiac electrophysiology. However, previous methods for separating and quantifying the components of I (Kv) in mouse myocardium have yielded inconsistencies. In this study, we developed a statistically rigorous method to uniquely quantify various I (Kv) in adult mouse ventricular myocytes, and concluded that tri-exponential functions combined with depolarizing pulses of duration greater than 20 s are essential to adequately separate the different I (Kv) components. This method enabled us to reliably dissect the kinetic components of the decay phase of I (Kv) into fast (I (to)), intermediate (K(V)1.5-encoded I (K,slow1)) and slow (K(V)2-encoded I (K,slow2)) components. The most rapid kinetic phase, I (to), can be further dissected into fast (K(V)4-encoded I (to,f)) and slow (K(V)1.4-encoded I (to,s)) components by measuring recovery from inactivation, voltage-dependence of activation and sensitivity to HpTx-2 and 4-AP. The applicability of our dissection method was validated using transgenic mice over-expressing dominant-negative K(V)1.1 transgene which largely abolished the 4-AP-sensitive portion of I (to) (i.e., I (to,s)) and the I (K,slow1) component. We also applied our method to Irx5-deficient mice and verified selective elevations of I (to) in endocardial myocytes. Our method should prove useful in future electrophysiological studies using mouse.

Full Text
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