Abstract

The excitation, contraction, and relaxation of an atrial cardiomyocyte are maintained by the activation and inactivation of numerous cardiac ion channels. Their collaborative efforts cause time-dependent changes of membrane potential, generating an action potential (AP), which is a surrogate marker of atrial arrhythmias. Recently, computational models of atrial electrophysiology emerged as a modality to investigate arrhythmia mechanisms and to predict the outcome of antiarrhythmic therapies. However, the individual contribution of atrial ion channels on atrial action potential and reentrant arrhythmia is not yet fully understood. Thus, in this multiscale in-silico study, perturbations of individual atrial ionic currents (INa, Ito, ICaL, IKur, IKr, IKs, IK1, INCX and INaK) in two in-silico models of human atrial cardiomyocyte (i.e., Courtemanche-1998 and Grandi-2011) were performed at both cellular and tissue levels. The results show that the inhibition of ICaL and INCX resulted in AP shortening, while the inhibition of IKur, IKr, IKs, IK1 and INaK prolonged AP duration (APD). Particularly, in-silico perturbations (inhibition and upregulation) of IKr and IKs only minorly affected atrial repolarization in the Grandi model. In contrast, in the Courtemanche model, the inhibition of IKr and IKs significantly prolonged APD and vice versa. Additionally, a 50% reduction of Ito density abbreviated APD in the Courtemanche model, while the same perturbation prolonged APD in the Grandi model. Similarly, a strong model dependence was also observed at tissue scale, with an observable IK1-mediated reentry stabilizing effect in the Courtemanche model but not in the Grandi atrial model. Moreover, the Grandi model was highly sensitive to a change on intracellular Ca2+ concentration, promoting a repolarization failure in ICaL upregulation above 150% and facilitating reentrant spiral waves stabilization by ICaL inhibition. Finally, by incorporating the previously published atrial fibrillation (AF)-associated ionic remodeling in the Courtemanche atrial model, in-silico modeling revealed the antiarrhythmic effect of IKr inhibition in both acute and chronic settings. Overall, our multiscale computational study highlights the strong model-dependent effects of ionic perturbations which could affect the model’s accuracy, interpretability, and prediction. This observation also suggests the need for a careful selection of in-silico models of atrial electrophysiology to achieve specific research aims.

Highlights

  • This article is an open access articleThe cardiac action potential (AP) results from a complex dynamic behavior of ionic currents within a cardiomyocyte

  • Our multiscale computational study highlights the strong model-dependent effects of ionic perturbations which could affect the model’s accuracy, interpretability, and prediction. This observation suggests the need for a careful selection of in-silico models of atrial electrophysiology to achieve specific research aims

  • The alteration of IKur affected the entire phase of repolarization in the Grandi model, but its effect was primarily in the early phase of repolarization in the Courtemanche model

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Summary

Introduction

This article is an open access articleThe cardiac action potential (AP) results from a complex dynamic behavior of ionic currents within a cardiomyocyte. Ca2+-dependent signaling processes [1] Such an activation of fast Na+ channels is denoted as a positive deflection (rapid depolarization; phase 0) of the cardiac AP, whereas the opening of the. Some atrial-specific K+ channels (e.g., Ca2+-activated, two-pore domain and ultra-rapid delayed-rectifier K+ channels) have been reported to hold an important role in the AP repolarization. Such a repolarization is displayed as a negative deflection of the AP (phase 1 and 3), restoring the membrane potential to the resting state (phase 4). AP morphology and AP duration (APD) are commonly considered as cellular markers of cardiac arrhythmias

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