4.6 Article

Ephaptic Coupling Is a Mechanism of Conduction Reserve During Reduced Gap Junction Coupling

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2022.848019

Keywords

cellular coupling; propagation; gap junction remodeling; myocardium; simulation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HL102298, R01HL146169]
  2. American Heart Association Pre and Post-Doctoral Fellowships

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Many cardiac pathologies are associated with reduced gap junction coupling. The relationship between the phenotype and functional expression of the connexin gap junction family of proteins is controversial. Low gap junction coupling can be explained by ephaptic coupling theory and can also increase intracellular charge accumulation, resulting in faster transmembrane potential rate of change during depolarization. Studies suggest that conduction reserve is more dependent on ephaptic coupling than charge accumulation during gap junction uncoupling.
Many cardiac pathologies are associated with reduced gap junction (GJ) coupling, an important modulator of cardiac conduction velocity (CV). However, the relationship between phenotype and functional expression of the connexin GJ family of proteins is controversial. For example, a 50% reduction of GJ coupling has been shown to have little impact on myocardial CV due to a concept known as conduction reserve. This can be explained by the ephaptic coupling (EpC) theory whereby conduction is maintained by a combination of low GJ coupling and increased electrical fields generated in the sodium channel rich clefts between neighboring myocytes. At the same time, low GJ coupling may also increase intracellular charge accumulation within myocytes, resulting in a faster transmembrane potential rate of change during depolarization (dV/dt_max) that maintains macroscopic conduction. To provide insight into the prevalence of these two phenomena during pathological conditions, we investigated the relationship between EpC and charge accumulation within the setting of GJ remodeling using multicellular simulations and companion perfused mouse heart experiments. Conduction along a fiber of myocardial cells was simulated for a range of GJ conditions. The model incorporated intercellular variations, including GJ coupling conductance and distribution, cell-to-cell separation in the intercalated disc (perinexal width-W-P), and variations in sodium channel distribution. Perfused heart studies having conditions analogous to those of the simulations were performed using wild type mice and mice heterozygous null for the connexin gene Gja1. With insight from simulations, the relative contributions of EpC and charge accumulation on action potential parameters and conduction velocities were analyzed. Both simulation and experimental results support a common conclusion that low GJ coupling decreases and narrowing W-P increases the rate of the AP upstroke when sodium channels are densely expressed at the ends of myocytes, indicating that conduction reserve is more dependent on EpC than charge accumulation during GJ uncoupling.

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