4.7 Article

Conduction slowing and sudden arrhythmic death in mice with cardiac-restricted inactivation of connexin43

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 88, Issue 3, Pages 333-339

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.RES.88.3.333

Keywords

gap junction; connexin43; arrhythmia; conduction

Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [1 SS10 RR0 9145-01] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL04222, P01 HL030557, HL30557, R01 HL064757, HL38449, HL39707, P01 HL039707, HL64757] Funding Source: Medline

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Cardiac arrhythmia is a common and often lethal manifestation of many forms of heart disease. Gap junction remodeling has been postulated to contribute to the increased propensity for arrhythmogenesis in diseased myocardium, although a causative role in vivo remains speculative. By generating mice with cardiac-restricted knockout of connexin43 (Cx43), we have circumvented the perinatal lethal developmental defect associated with germline inactivation of this gap junction channel gene and uncovered an essential role for Cx43 in the maintenance of electrical stability. Mice with cardiac-specific loss of Cx43 have normal heart structure and contractile function, and yet they uniformly (28 of 28 conditional Cx43 knockout mice observed) develop sudden cardiac death from spontaneous ventricular arrhythmias by 2 months of age. Optical mapping of the epicardial electrical activation pattern in Cx43 conditional knockout mice revealed that ventricular conduction velocity was significantly slowed by up to 55% in the transverse direction and 42% in the longitudinal direction, resulting in an increase in anisotropic ratio compared with control littermates (2.1+/-0.13 versus 1.66+/-0.06; P<0.01). This novel genetic murine model of primary sudden cardiac death defines gap junctional abnormalities as a key molecular feature of the arrhythmogenic substrate.

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