AJP - Heart Calcium Transients and Cell-Sarcomere
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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (May 2, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpheart.91495.2007
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Submitted on December 19, 2007
Revised on April 27, 2008
Accepted on April 28, 2008

Subepicardial phase-0 block and discontinuous transmural conduction underlie right-precordial ST-segment elevation by a SCN5A loss-of-function mutation

Marketa Bebarova1, Tom O'Hara2, Jan L. M. C. Geelen3, Roselie J. Jongbloed4, Carl Timmermans1, Yvonne H. Arens4, Luz-Maria Rodriguez1, Yoram Rudy5, and Paul G.A. Volders1*

1 Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht
2 Cardiac Bioelectricity and Arrhythmia Center
3 Maastricht University
4 Academic Hospital Maastricht
5 Washington University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: p.volders{at}cardio.unimaas.nl.

Two mechanisms are generally proposed to explain right-precordial ST-segment elevation in Brugada syndrome: (1) Right-ventricular (RV) subepicardial action-potential shortening and/or loss of dome causing transmural dispersion of repolarization; (2) RV conduction delay. Here we report novel mechanistic insights into ST-segment elevation associated with a Na+-current (INa) loss-of-function mutation from studies in a Dutch kindred with the C-terminal SCN5A variant p.Phe2004Leu. The proband, a male, experienced syncope at age 22 and had coved-type ST-segment elevations in ECG leads V1 and V2, and negative T-waves in V2. Peak and persistent mutant INa were significantly decreased. INa closed-state inactivation was increased, slow inactivation accelerated, and recovery from inactivation delayed. Computer-simulated INa-dependent excitation was decremental from endo- to epicardium at cycle length 1000 ms, not at cycle length 300 ms. Propagation was discontinuous across the midmyocardial (M) to epicardial transition region, exhibiting a long local delay due to phase-0 block. Beyond this region, axial excitatory current was provided by phase 2 (dome) of the M-cell action potentials and depended on L-type Ca2+ current ("phase-2 conduction"). These results explain right-precordial ST-segment elevation on the basis of RV transmural gradients of membrane potentials during early repolarization caused by discontinuous conduction. The late slow-upstroke action potentials at the subepicardium produce T-wave inversion in the computed ECG waveform, in line with the clinical ECG.







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