Abstract

AimsLoss-of-function of the cardiac sodium channel NaV1.5 is a common feature of Brugada syndrome. Arrhythmias arise preferentially from the right ventricle (RV) despite equivalent NaV1.5 downregulation in the left ventricle (LV). The reasons for increased RV sensitivity to NaV1.5 loss-of-function mutations remain unclear. Because ventricular electrical activation occurs predominantly in the transmural axis, we compare RV and LV transmural electrophysiology to determine the underlying cause of the asymmetrical conduction abnormalities in Scn5a haploinsufficient mice (Scn5a+/−).Methods and resultsOptical mapping and two-photon microscopy in isolated-perfused mouse hearts demonstrated equivalent depression of transmural conduction velocity (CV) in the LV and RV of Scn5a+/− vs. wild-type littermates. Only RV transmural conduction was further impaired when challenged with increased pacing frequencies. Epicardial dispersion of activation and beat-to-beat variation in activation time were increased only in the RV of Scn5a+/− hearts. Analysis of confocal and histological images revealed larger intramural clefts between cardiomyocyte layers in the RV vs. LV, independent of genotype. Acute sodium current inhibition in wild type hearts using tetrodotoxin reproduced beat-to-beat activation variability and frequency-dependent CV slowing in the RV only, with the LV unaffected. The influence of clefts on conduction was examined using a two-dimensional monodomain computational model. When peak sodium channel conductance was reduced to 50% of normal the presence of clefts between cardiomyocyte layers reproduced the activation variability and conduction phenotype observed experimentally.ConclusionsNormal structural heterogeneities present in the RV are responsible for increased vulnerability to conduction slowing in the presence of reduced sodium channel function. Heterogeneous conduction slowing seen in the RV will predispose to functional block and the initiation of re-entrant ventricular arrhythmias.

Highlights

  • The cardiac sodium channel (NaV1.5) is responsible for the rapid upstroke phase of the action potential (AP) in both atrial and ventricular myocytes

  • Heterogeneous conduction slowing seen in the right ventricle (RV) will predispose to functional block and the initiation of re-entrant ventricular arrhythmias

  • Line-scan recordings with 2 P revealed that AP rise time (Figure 1D— upper panel) was slowed in the LV and RV of Scn5aþ/- hearts throughout the transmural region measured, compared with WT hearts

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Summary

Introduction

The cardiac sodium channel (NaV1.5) is responsible for the rapid upstroke phase of the action potential (AP) in both atrial and ventricular myocytes. This protein plays a critical role in regulating cell excitability and electrical propagation in the heart.

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