Abstract

Spontaneous beating of the sinoatrial node (SAN), the primary pacemaker of the heart, is initiated, sustained, and regulated by a complex system that integrates ion channels and transporters on the cell membrane surface (often referred to as “membrane clock”) with subcellular calcium handling machinery (by parity of reasoning referred to as an intracellular “Ca2+ clock”). Stable, rhythmic beating of the SAN is ensured by a rigorous synchronization between these two clocks highlighted in the coupled-clock system concept of SAN timekeeping. The emerging results demonstrate that such synchronization of the complex pacemaking machinery at the cellular level depends on tightly regulated spatiotemporal signals which are restricted to precise sub-cellular microdomains and associated with discrete clusters of different ion channels, transporters, and regulatory receptors. It has recently become evident that within the microdomains, various proteins form an interacting network and work together as a part of a macromolecular signaling complex. These protein–protein interactions are tightly controlled and regulated by a variety of neurohormonal signaling pathways and the diversity of cellular responses achieved with a limited pool of second messengers is made possible through the organization of essential signal components in particular microdomains. In this review, we highlight the emerging understanding of the functionality of distinct subcellular microdomains in SAN myocytes and their functional role in the accumulation and neurohormonal regulation of proteins involved in cardiac pacemaking. We also demonstrate how changes in scaffolding proteins may lead to microdomain-targeted remodeling and regulation of pacemaker proteins contributing to SAN dysfunction.

Highlights

  • The sinoatrial node (SAN) is the primary pacemaker of the heart

  • Another scaffolding protein family linked to SAN dysfunction (SND), is A kinase-anchoring proteins (AKAPs)

  • More than 14 different AKAPs have been shown to be expressed in both rodent and human heart tissue including: AKAP5 (AKAP150/79), AKAP7 (AKAP 15/18), gravin (AKAP12), AKAP9 and mAKAP

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The sinoatrial node (SAN) is the primary pacemaker of the heart. Spontaneous beating of the SAN is initiated, sustained, and regulated by a complex system that integrates ion channels and transporters located on the cell membrane surface (often referred to as “membrane clock”) with subcellular calcium handling machinery (by parity of reasoning referred to as an intracellular “Ca-Clock”) (Lakatta and DiFrancesco, 2009; Lakatta et al, 2010). The SAN has a highly complex and heterogeneous structure (reviewed in detail elsewhere, Boyett et al, 2000; Fedorov et al, 2012; Csepe et al, 2016) It was shown in humans (Boineau et al, 1988; Li et al, 2017) and dogs (Glukhov et al, 2013) that the SAN consist of several intranodal pacemaker clusters which have different electrophysiological properties, including automaticity robustness and varying response to autonomic stimulation. Though most of these changes are studied in transgenic mouse models, emerging evidence from SND patients harboring similar mutations, which are summarized in the review for available proteins, support the observed results and highlight microdomain-targeted remodeling as a new dimension to cardiovascular disease

Pacemaker Channels
Other Channels
COMPARTMENTALIZED AUTONOMIC REGULATION IN SANCs
Compartmentalized Muscarinic Receptors
SND AND SCAFFOLDING PROTEINS
Calcium clock
Popdc Protein
SUMMARY
Other Structural Proteins
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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