Abstract

Pacemaker activity of automatic cardiac myocytes controls the heartbeat in everyday life. Cardiac automaticity is under the control of several neurotransmitters and hormones and is constantly regulated by the autonomic nervous system to match the physiological needs of the organism. Several classes of ion channels and proteins involved in intracellular Ca2+ dynamics contribute to pacemaker activity. The functional role of voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs) in heart automaticity and impulse conduction has been matter of debate for 30 years. However, growing evidence shows that VGCCs are important regulators of the pacemaker mechanisms and play also a major role in atrio-ventricular impulse conduction. Incidentally, studies performed in genetically modified mice lacking L-type Cav1.3 (Cav1.3−/−) or T-type Cav3.1 (Cav3.1−/−) channels show that genetic inactivation of these channels strongly impacts pacemaking. In cardiac pacemaker cells, VGCCs activate at negative voltages at the beginning of the diastolic depolarization and importantly contribute to this phase by supplying inward current. Loss-of-function of these channels also impairs atrio-ventricular conduction. Furthermore, inactivation of Cav1.3 channels promotes also atrial fibrillation and flutter in knockout mice suggesting that these channels can play a role in stabilizing atrial rhythm. Genomic analysis demonstrated that Cav1.3 and Cav3.1 channels are widely expressed in pacemaker tissue of mice, rabbits and humans. Importantly, human diseases of pacemaker activity such as congenital bradycardia and heart block have been attributed to loss-of-function of Cav1.3 and Cav3.1 channels. In this article, we will review the current knowledge on the role of VGCCs in the generation and regulation of heart rate and rhythm. We will discuss also how loss of Ca2+ entry through VGCCs could influence intracellular Ca2+ handling and promote atrial arrhythmias.

Highlights

  • Pacemaker activity in the heart is generated by specialized myocytes, able to generate periodical oscillations of their membrane potential

  • Several classes of ion channels and proteins involved in intracellular Ca2+ dynamics contribute to pacemaker activity

  • Pacemaker cells are localized in the sino-atrial node (SAN), which is a thin tissue located in the right atrium

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Pacemaker activity in the heart is generated by specialized myocytes, able to generate periodical oscillations of their membrane potential. The generation of the automaticity in cardiac pacemaker cells is due to the diastolic depolarization, a spontaneous slowly depolarizing phase of the action potential cycle. Calcium channels in heart automaticity diastolic depolarization is a spontaneous rhythmic phenomenon of Ca2+ release from the SR activating the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) in forward mode This NCX mediated inward current is able to depolarize the membrane voltage to the threshold of the following action potential (Bogdanov et al, 2001; Vinogradova et al, 2002). In the coupled-clock model of pacemaking, the activity of membrane ion channels and spontaneous Ca2+ release mutually entrain to generate pacemaking (Lakatta et al, 2010; Monfredi et al, 2013).

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Findings
DISEASES OF HEART RHYTHM AND CARDIAC VGCCs
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