4.7 Article

Modulation of cardiac gap junction expression and arrhythmic susceptibility

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 95, Issue 10, Pages 1035-1041

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.RES.0000148664.33695.2a

Keywords

connexin43; arrhythmia; electrophysiology; heart; mice

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL030557, HL64757, R01 HL076751-03, R01 HL076751-01A1, HL30557, R01 HL076751-02, R01 HL076751, R01 HL076751-04, R01 HL064757, HL04222] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Connexin43 (Cx43), the predominant ventricular gap junction protein, is critical for maintaining normal cardiac electrical conduction, and its absence in the mouse heart results in sudden arrhythmic death. The mechanisms linking reduced Cx43 abundance in the heart and inducibility of malignant ventricular arrhythmias have yet to be established. In this report, we investigate arrhythmic susceptibility in a murine model genetically engineered to express progressively decreasing levels of Cx43. Progressively older cardiac-restricted Cx43 conditional knockout (CKO) mice were selectively bred to produce a heart-specific Cx43-deficient subline (O-CKO mice) in which the loss of Cx43 in the heart occurs more gradually. O-CKO mice lived significantly longer than the initial series of CKO mice but still died suddenly and prematurely. At 25 days of age, cardiac Cx43 protein levels decreased to 59% of control values ( P < 0.01), but conduction velocity was not significantly decreased and no O-CKO mice were inducible into sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias. By 45 days of age, cardiac Cx43 abundance had decreased in a heterogeneous fashion to 18% of control levels, conduction velocity had slowed to half of that observed in control hearts, and 80% of O-CKO mice were inducible into lethal tachyarrhythmias. Enhanced susceptibility to induced arrhythmias was not associated with altered invasive hemodynamic measurements or changes in ventricular effective refractory period. Thus, moderately severe reductions in Cx43 abundance are associated with slowing of impulse propagation and a dramatic increase in the susceptibility to inducible ventricular arrhythmias.

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