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Cardiovascular Research 2006 71(4):704-714; doi:10.1016/j.cardiores.2006.06.001
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Copyright © 2006, European Society of Cardiology

Pro-arrhythmogenic potential of immature cardiomyocytes is triggered by low coupling and cluster size

Teun P. de Boera, Marcel A.G. van der Heydena, Martin B. Rooka, Ronald Wildersb, Renske Broekstraa, Bart Koka, Marc A. Vosa, Jacques M.T. de Bakkera,c,d and Toon A.B. van Veena,*

aHeart Lung Center Utrecht, Department of Medical Physiology, Yalelaan 50, 3584 CM Utrecht, The Netherlands
bDepartment of Physiology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
cInteruniversity Cardiology Institute of the Netherlands, Utrecht, The Netherlands
dExperimental and Molecular Cardiology Group, Cardiovascular Research Institute Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

* Corresponding author. Tel.: +31 30 253 8900; fax: +31 30 253 9036. Email address: a.a.b.vanveen{at}med.uu.nl

Objective: Cell transplantation strategies to regenerate compromised myocardium take advance of in vitro generated cardiomyocytes. Common in those immature myocytes is spontaneous impulse formation and a restricted ability to establish proper electrical interaction. Spontaneous impulse formation and impaired cell-to-cell coupling have been shown to be arrhythmogenic. To investigate whether these features harbour a pro-arrhyhmogenic potential for cell transplantation, a co-culture of spontaneously active neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRC) and quiescent adult dog cardiomyocytes (ADC) was used.

Methods ADCs and NRCs were isolated and cultured on laminin-coated substrates. Connexin43, N-cadherin and {alpha}-actinin expression was evaluated with immunohistochemistry. Intercellular coupling was measured in cell pairs using the dual voltage clamp technique and fluorescent dye injection.

Results: One day after isolation, NRCs were beating spontaneously, while ADCs remained quiescent in monoculture. ADC resting membrane potential was – 80.3±0.2 mV (mean±SEM, N=24) and did not change significantly over time. NRCs had a maximal diastolic potential of – 65.0±2.8mV (N=4). After one day of co-culture, pseudopodia-like extensions developed at the former intercalated discs of ADCs, contacting the NRCs. Only ADCs that contacted three or more NRCs started to beat in synchrony. Expression of connexin43 and N-cadherin indicated presence of electrical and mechanical junctions at the interface between the two cell-types. Transfer of Lucifer Yellow demonstrated junctional permeability between ADCs and NRCs. Junctional conductance between ADC–ADC (31.9±5.1 nS, N=10) and NRC–NRC (35.0±9.6 nS, N=6) pairs was significantly higher compared to ADC–NRC pairs (9.7±2.9 nS, N=8). Gap-junctional blockade with halothane reversibly abolished NRC-triggered beating of ADCs. Computer simulations demonstrated that within a delicate ‘window’ of gap junctional conductance small clusters of spontaneously active cells are able to induce triggered activity in quiescent mature myocytes but also in a two-dimensional sheet of ventricular cells.

Conclusion Spontaneously active immature cardiomyocytes are able to trigger mature cardiomyocytes depending on their level of electrical coupling and the amount of coupled immature myocytes.

KEYWORDS Cell culture; Arrhythmia (mechanisms); Gap junctions; Cardiomyocyte; Computer modelling


Time for primary review 23 days


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