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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 276: H391-H400, 1999;
0363-6135/99 $5.00
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Vol. 276, Issue 2, H391-H400, February 1999

Electrical interactions among real cardiac cells and cell models in a linear strand

Mary B. Wagner1, Takao Namiki1, Ronald Wilders2,3, Ronald W. Joyner1, Habo J. Jongsma2, E. Etienne Verheijck2,3, Rajiv Kumar1, David A. Golod1, William N. Goolsby1, and Antoni C. G. van Ginneken3

1 Todd Franklin Cardiac Research Laboratory, The Children's Heart Center, Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322; 2 Department of Medical Physiology and Sports Medicine, Utrecht University, 3584 CG Utrecht; and 3 Department of Physiology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands


    ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Previous work with model systems for action potential conduction have been restricted to conduction between two real cells or conduction between a model cell and a real cell. The inclusion of additional elements to make a linear strand has allowed us to investigate the interactions between cells at a higher level of complexity. When, in the simplest case of a linear strand of three elements, the conductance between elements 2 and 3 (GC2) is varied, this affects the success or failure of propagation between elements 1 and 2 (coupled by GC1) as well as the success or failure of propagation between elements 2 and 3. Several major features were illustrated. 1) When GC1 was only slightly greater than the coupling conductance required for successful propagation between a model cell and a real cell, addition of a third element of the strand either prevented conduction from element 1 to element 2 (when GC2 was high) or allowed conduction from element 1 to element 2 but not conduction from element 2 to element 3 (when GC2 was low). 2) For higher levels of GC1, there was an allowable "window" of values of GC2 for successful conduction from element 1 through to element 3. The size of this allowable window of GC2 values increased with increasing values of GC1, and this increase was produced by increases in the upper bound of GC2 values. 3) When the size of the central element of the strand was reduced, this facilitated conduction through the strand, increasing the range of the allowable window of GC2 values. The overall success or failure of conduction through a structure of cells that has a spatially inhomogeneous distribution of coupling conductances cannot be predicted simply by the average or the minimum value of coupling conductance but may depend on the actual spatial distribution of these conductances.

coupling conductance; cardiac action potential conduction


    INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

CONDUCTION OF THE CARDIAC action potential requires successive activation of excitable cells by current flow through intercellular junctions. The ability to isolate single cardiac cells has led to great advances in our understanding of the ionic conductances and transport processes that determine the excitability of single cells. The ability to study pairs of cells with intercellular junctions has allowed direct measurements of the junctional conductance between cells. There is now a considerable body of evidence that suggests that the properties of individual cells vary in different regions of the heart. These properties are further modulated by autonomic tone, the development of hypertrophy, the previous occurrence of myocardial ischemia, and the acute effects of myocardial ischemia (11). It is also clear that the coupling conductance between cells can also be modulated and can lead to the occurrence of discontinuous conduction both as a normal occurrence in some cardiac regions and as a response to myocardial injury (14).

The ability to create a coupled pair of cells from isolated myocytes has led to a greater understanding of the interplay between the coupling current and the ionic membrane current of individual cells. The "coupling clamp" technique that we introduced has been used in a variety of applications in which we coupled together a pair of cells consisting of two rabbit ventricular myocytes (6), two guinea pig ventricular myocytes (17), or two rabbit sinoatrial node cells (20). Other investigators have used this technique to couple together single cells or groups of cells from the rabbit atrioventricular (16) and sinoatrial node regions (22) and isolated Purkinje and ventricular cells (3). We also modified this technique to couple together real isolated cardiac cells to a cell model, using a guinea pig ventricular myocyte coupled to a real-time simulation of a ventricular cell model (24), or a rabbit atrial cell, a guinea pig ventricular cell, a rabbit ventricular cell, or a rabbit sinoatrial node cell to a sinoatrial node cell model (4, 8, 21, 25). These experiments showed that the critical coupling conductance for successful conduction for a cell pair depended strongly on the input conductance of the cells, with the critical coupling conductance being much lower for atrial or nodal cells than for ventricular cells, and also on the magnitude of the L-type calcium current as a source of the delayed inward current for the leader cell to support delayed conduction (5). The common feature of these hybrid cell pair studies is that the real cell can be used as either the leader or the follower for action potential conduction between the two cells.

However, the situation in the intact myocardium is more complex, in that, for all regions of the heart except that of the origination site of the cardiac activation sequence, each cell must play a dual role of being a follower of the activation preceding this cell as well as a leader in supplying current to cells for subsequent activation. One region where this process has been particularly well studied is the Purkinje-ventricular junctional region where, during the normal cardiac activation sequence, the action potential occurs first in the endocardial Purkinje cells, which then activate an anatomically distinct group of small cells known as transitional cells, and these cells then supply the coupling current for activation of the underlying ventricular endocardium (12, 19, 23). Other regions, particularly after the occurrence of myocardial ischemia, show clear signs of progressive activation of small groups of cells, as shown experimentally by the recording of fractionated local electrocardiograms and anatomically by the histological appearance of distinct groups of cells largely separated by bundles of connective tissue (1). This "fractionation" of the action potential conduction may be, to some extent, a normal development associated with aging or the development of hypertrophy from hypertension (14, 15). Our experimental studies on discontinuous conduction of a cell pair have been extended by recent theoretical studies (13) in which a linear strand of cardiac cell models was used to show that the presence of low levels of coupling between cells led to alterations in the safety factor for conduction and a shift of the dominant ionic current for successful conduction from the fast sodium current to the slower L-type calcium current.

We extended our technique of coupling together either two real cardiac cells or a real cardiac cell to a model cell to incorporate a larger number of cell models in a linear strand in which a real cell may be included within the strand at any location. In the simplest case of this "coupled strand" technique, we can use a strand of three cells in which the first and third cells are represented by real-time solutions of a ventricular cell model, whereas the central cell of the strand is a real ventricular cell. This allows the real cell to be a follower from activation of the first cell of the strand and then to be a leader for the interaction between the second and third cells of the strand. We used this technique to investigate the necessary conditions of coupling conductance for successful conduction of the action potential along the strand.


    METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Isolation of ventricular cells. The enzymatic procedure for single cell isolation of ventricular cells was similar to that of Yazawa et al. (26), as described in our previous work (24). Hearts were removed from guinea pigs weighing 300-600 g that were anesthetized (intraperitoneally) using 100 mg/kg Nembutal. The heart was perfused via an aortic cannula for 3-5 min at a rate of 6-10 ml/min with normal Tyrode solution. After the blood was washed out from the coronary arteries, the heart was perfused with nominally Ca2+-free Tyrode solution for 5-6 min. The heart was then perfused with the nominally Ca2+-free Tyrode solution containing collagenase (type XI, 22 mg/100 ml; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and protease (type XIV, 1 mg/100 ml; Sigma) for 5-10 min. The enzymes were then washed out from the heart with a high-K+-low-Cl- storage solution for 5 min. After perfusion of the high-K+ storage solution, the right ventricle and the ventricular septum were cut into pieces and gently triturated in the high-K+ storage solution and stored at 4°C. The isolated cells were transferred to an experimental chamber and continuously superfused with normal Tyrode solution at 2 ml/min at 36-37°C. Only quiescent cells with preservation of their rod-shaped appearance were studied using relatively high-resistance patch pipettes (3-5 MOmega ) to minimize intracellular dialysis. Recordings of membrane potential were made with an Axoclamp 2A amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) in the current clamp mode. The composition of solutions used was as follows (in mM): normal Tyrode, 148.8 NaCl, 4 KCl, 1.8 CaCl2, 0.53 MgCl2, 0.33 NaH2PO4, 5 HEPES, and 5 dextrose, with pH adjusted to 7.4 using NaOH; Ca2+-free Tyrode, 148.8 NaCl, 4 KCl, 0.53 MgCl2, 0.33 NaH2PO4, 5 HEPES, and 5 dextrose, with pH adjusted to 7.4 using NaOH; storage solution, 100 potassium glutamate, 25 KCl, 10 KH2PO4, 20 taurine, 1 MgSO4, 0.5 EGTA, 10 dextrose, and 5 HEPES, with pH adjusted to 7.2 using KOH; pipette solution for current clamp recordings, 135 KCl, 5 Mg-ATP, 5 Na2 creatine phosphate, and 10 HEPES, with pH adjusted to 7.2 using KOH.

Electrical coupling of a real guinea pig ventricular cell within a strand of cell models. We developed an electrical circuit that can provide a variable effective coupling conductance between two isolated heart cells that are not actually in direct contact with each other (6, 18). We also previously described (24) how to couple a real cell to a single model cell in real time with a simultaneous simulation of the model cell that includes determination of and application of the coupling current to the real cell and to the model cell. In the present work, we extended this methodology to use a linear strand of cells, of which one cell is a real cell and the other cells are model cells. In the present work, we use the model of Luo and Rudy (LR) (9, 10) for an isolated guinea pig ventricular cell for each of the model cells. This model includes sarcolemmal ionic channel currents and pump currents as well as a representation of calcium ion concentration with cytoplasmic buffers and the release and uptake of calcium by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The large variation in cell size (represented by variations in current threshold for excitation) that is found experimentally represents an experimental problem but also an opportunity to study the effects of cell size on conduction properties. The inclusion in our coupling model of the ability to change the effective cell size of either the computer model and/or the real cell is necessary for normalization of the results. This capability is produced by simply scaling the coupling current that is being injected into either the real ventricular cell or any of the model cells by a size factor ZJ for element J. In our experiments, we normalized the size of each of the real cells studied by using a factor of ZJ for each real ventricular cell, such that its effective current threshold with current pulses 2 ms in duration is equal to that of the standard size LR model cell (2.6 nA). Figure 1 illustrates how a strand of only three cells is realized by our system. For this illustration, we placed the real cell between two model cells. The coupling conductances are labeled GCJ for the coupling conductance between element J and element J + 1 and a coupling current of ICJ flowing from element J to element J + 1. This produces a time-varying coupling current of IC1 = (V1 - V2) · GC1 flowing from the model cell of element 1 to the real cell and a time-varying coupling current IC2 = (V2 - V3) · GC2 flowing from the real cell to the model cell of element 3, where VJ is the time-varying membrane potential of element J. Thus the actual current applied to the real cell during the simulation is Z2 · (IC1 - IC2), where Z2 is the size factor for the real cell. This produces an effective increase in the size (as represented by an increase in current threshold and a decrease in input resistance) of the real cell by a factor of 1/Z2. In this illustration, the LR model for elements 1 and 3 is solved simultaneously at each time step, including in the simulation the measured membrane potential of the real cell to include the coupling currents in the simulations for elements 1 and 3. The limiting factor in the number of model cells that can be included is the speed of the computer. With a 200-MHz Pentium II computer (Gateway) and a Digidata 1200 analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog system (Axon Instruments), we can run a simulated strand with five model cells and one real cell at a time step of 80 µs. We used an experimental protocol in which we stimulated either the real cell or one of the model cells at 2 Hz with a stimulus 2 ms in duration and an amplitude ~10% above threshold. For each determination of critical coupling conductance, we used a 1-s period of uncoupling followed by 8 s of coupling at the desired values of coupling conductances. We defined the critical value of the coupling conductance being tested as the value for which the majority of the action potentials during the coupling period was successfully conducted.


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Fig. 1.   Diagram of how interactions among a real cell and a number of cell models are realized. A: 1 possible arrangement of a hybrid strand of only 3 elements. Elements 1 and 3 are cell models [in this particular implementation chosen to be the Luo and Rudy (LR) model (9, 10)], whereas element 2 is a real cell. B: how the computer program establishes an equivalent circuit such that elements 1 and 3 are solved as model systems, with interactions via the analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) converter with the real cell (element 2) at each time step. A recording of membrane potential of the real cell is made simultaneously with the simulation, with capability of injecting current (positive or negative) into the real cell via the voltage-to-current (V to I) converter. Note that actual current injected into the real cell during each time step is the difference between 2 computed currents: a current IC1 = (V1 - V2) · GC1 flowing from element 1 into the real cell and a current IC2 = (V2 - V3) · GC2 flowing from the real cell to element 3, where VJ is membrane potential of element J, GCJ is coupling conductance between element J and element J + 1, and ICJ is coupling current between element J and element J + 1. Factor ZJ is also available for each element J to scale currents injected into this element such that the effective size of this element is multiplied by a factor 1/ZJ. t, Time; Delta , change.

Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was performed by using Sigma Stat for Windows (Jandel Scientific, Corte Madera, CA). Statistical significance was determined by Student's t-test for unpaired data. P values <0.05 were regarded as significant. Data are presented as means ± SE in RESULTS. ERROR BARS IN FIGS. 1-9 REPRESENT SE.


    RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

A linear strand composed of n excitable elements has n - 1 coupling conductances across which n - 1 propagational processes occur during action potential propagation from one end of the strand to the other end. For the specific example of a short strand of only three elements, with the central element being a real cell and elements 1 and 3 represented by LR model cells, propagation must first occur from model element 1 to real cell element 2 through coupling conductance GC1 and then must occur from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3 through coupling conductance GC2. To separately analyze the critical coupling conductances required for these two processes, we can either 1) set GC1 to zero (with repetitive stimulation of real cell element 2) to test propagation from element 2 to element 3, or 2) set GC2 to zero (with repetitive stimulation of model cell element 1) to test propagation from element 1 to element 2. Figure 2 illustrates the results of these two simplifications of a three-cell strand. For each part of Fig. 2, the recordings from the real cell are shown as solid lines and recordings from a model cell are shown as dotted or dashed lines for elements 1 and 3, respectively. Figure 2A shows that action potential propagation succeeds at a GC2 of 6.4 nS and fails with a GC2 of 6.3 nS for conduction from the real cell to the LR model cell that represents element 3 by setting GC1 to zero. Figure 2B shows that action potential propagation succeeds at a GC1 of 5.9 nS and fails with a GC1 of 5.8 nS for conduction from the LR model cell that represents element 1 to the real cell element 2 when GC2 is set to zero. Thus the critical coupling conductances are somewhat different in testing propagation from a real cell to a model cell compared with testing propagation from a model cell to a real cell. For 21 cells in which this protocol was tested, the critical coupling conductance from a real cell to a model cell was 7.3 ± 0.2 nS (mean ± SE), whereas the critical coupling conductance from a model cell to a real cell was 5.9 ± 0.2 nS.


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Fig. 2.   Demonstration of critical coupling conductance required for successful propagation of an action potential for a real cell coupled between 2 LR model cells. A: determination of a critical coupling conductance of 6.4 nS for conduction from the real cell to the LR model cell that represents element 3 by setting GC1 to 0 and then finding that conduction fails with a GC2 of 6.3 nS and succeeds for a GC2 of 6.4 nS. Solid lines represent recordings from the real cell, and dashed lines represent simulations of the LR model cell of element 3. B: determination of a critical coupling conductance of 5.9 nS for conduction from the LR model cell that represents element 1 to the real cell by setting GC2 to 0 and then finding that conduction fails with a GC1 of 5.8 nS and succeeds for a GC1 of 5.9 nS. As in A, solid lines are recordings from the real cell and dotted lines are simulations of the LR model cell of element 1. Cell M112097g,c is depicted.

For the same real cell used for Fig. 2, we show in Fig. 3 the results obtained when we used a coupling conductance of 7 nS for GC1 and then varied the value of GC2 while repetitively stimulating the model cell element 1. The numbers 1, 2, and 3 indicate the element number for the traces that are dotted (LR model cell of element 1), solid (real cell of element 2), and dashed (LR model cell of element 3). For each part of this figure, we made GC1 and GC2 functions of time to show the results without coupling and with coupling. For Fig. 3A, GC1 is switched from 0 to 7 nS and GC2 is switched from 0 to 4 nS at the time indicated by the arrow. For the first stimulation, the action potential occurs only in model element 1, because GC1 is zero at this time. For the second stimulation, there is action potential conduction from model element 1 to real cell element 2, but the action potential in real cell element 2 fails to propagate to model element 3. For Fig. 3B, GC1 is switched from 0 to 7 nS and GC2 is switched from 0 to 5 nS at the time indicated by the arrow. The first stimulation has the same result as in Fig. 3A, but the second stimulation (occurring after coupling conductances have been turned on) now fails to propagate from model element 1 to real cell element 2. From other data not shown, for a GC1 of 7 nS, values of GC2 <4 nS produced the same result as for Fig. 3A, namely propagation from element 1 to element 2 but failure of propagation from element 2 to element 3. In addition, for a GC1 of 7 nS, values of GC2 >5 nS produced the same result as for Fig. 3B, namely propagation failure from element 1 to element 2. Thus, for a GC1 of 7 nS, there were no values of GC2 for which successful propagation from element 1 to element 3 could occur.


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Fig. 3.   Results obtained with a real cell coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 7 nS. A: simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. For each part, GC1 is switched from 0 to 7 nS and GC2 is switched from 0 to either 4 (A) or 5 (B) nS at time indicated by arrow. For the first stimulation of A and B, the action potential occurs only in element 1. For A, the second stimulation produces action potential conduction from element 1 to element 2 but not from element 2 to element 3. For B, the second stimulation does not produce action potential conduction from element 1 to element 2 (and thus, of course, not from element 2 to element 3). Numbers 1, 2, and 3 indicate element number for traces that are dotted (LR model cell of element 1), solid (real cell of element 2), and dashed (LR model cell of element 3). Cell M112097g,c is depicted.

Figure 4 shows results obtained with the same real cell as for Figs. 2 and 3, using a GC1 of 8 nS. Each part illustrates simulations of model cell elements 1 and 3, with a recording from the real cell element 2 during repetitive stimulation of element 1. For Fig. 4A, when we set GC2 to 5 nS, there was successful propagation from model cell element 1 to real cell element 2 but failure of propagation from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3. For Fig. 4B, with GC2 equal to 6 nS, and also for Fig. 4C, with GC2 equal to 8 nS, there is successful propagation from element 1 to element 2 and on to element 3. For Fig. 4D, with GC2 equal to 9 nS, there is failure of propagation from element 1 to element 2. From data not shown, values of GC2 <5 nS produced results similar to those of Fig. 4A, values of GC2 >9 nS produced results similar to those of Fig. 4D, and values of GC2 between 6 and 8 nS produced results similar to those of Fig. 4, B and C (successful propagation through all 3 elements). These results show that for a GC1 of 8 nS (in contrast to results of Fig. 3 for a GC1 of 7 nS) there is a "window" of allowable values of GC2 for which successful propagation through all three elements can occur.


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Fig. 4.   Results obtained with a real cell coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 8 nS. Each part illustrates simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. GC2 is set to 5 (A), 6 (B), 8 (C), or 9 (D) nS. Dotted, solid, and dashed lines are for elements 1, 2, and 3, respectively. B and C illustrate successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and on to element 3. A shows conduction from element 1 to element 2 but failure from element 2 to element 3. D shows conduction failure from element 1 to element 2. Cell M112097g,c is depicted.

Figure 5 shows that the range of this allowable window of GC2 values is further increased when GC1 is increased to 10 nS. These results were also obtained with the same real cell used in Figs. 2-4. Figure 5A shows propagation success from element 1 to element 2 but propagation failure from element 2 to element 3 for a GC2 of 5 nS. Figure 5, B and C, shows successful propagation through elements 1, 2, and 3 for GC2 values of either 6 or 18 nS. Figure 5D shows propagation failure from element 1 to element 2 for a GC2 of 20 nS. As for Fig. 4, results obtained for GC2 <5 nS produced results similar to those of Fig. 4A, values of GC2 between 6 and 18 nS produced successful conduction through all three elements, and values of GC2 >20 nS produced results similar to those of Fig. 4D. Thus, for a GC1 of 10 nS, the allowable window of values of GC2 is increased to include all values between 6 and 18 nS. Note that the lower limit of this window ("lower bound") is 6 nS and remains the same for a GC1 of 8 or 10 nS, whereas the upper limit of this window ("upper bound") is substantially increased from 8 to 18 nS by increasing the value of GC1.


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Fig. 5.   Results obtained with a real cell coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 10 nS. Each part illustrates simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. GC2 is set to 5 (A), 6 (B), 18 (C), or 20 (D) nS. Dotted, solid, and dashed lines are for elements 1, 2, and 3, respectively. B and C illustrate successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and on to element 3. A shows conduction from element 1 to element 2 but failure from element 2 to element 3. D shows conduction failure from element 1 to element 2. Cell M112097g,c is depicted.

Figure 6A shows a summary of the results obtained from the same real cell used in Figs. 2-5, as we systematically varied GC1 and GC2 and tested the propagation phenomena produced. In Fig. 6, we used GC1 as the abscissa and GC2 as the ordinate (both independent variables) and plotted the resulting phenomena as one of three symbols: a filled circle when conduction succeeded from model cell element 1 to real cell element 2 but then failed from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3 (as in Figs. 4A and 5A), an asterisk to represent the case when conduction succeeded through all three elements (as in Figs. 4, B and C, and 5, B and C), and an open circle to represent the case when conduction failed from the stimulated model cell element 1 to the real cell element 2 (as in Figs. 4D and 5D). The solid lines connect the values of GC2 at which transitions from one result to another result occur. Note that for a GC1 of 7 nS there is no allowable window of values of GC2 for successful conduction. Figure 6B shows a statistical summary of the results obtained when a similar analysis was performed for a three-element strand with a real cell as element 2, using a total of 21 real cells. The values for the upper bounds are indicated as open triangles, and the values for the lower bounds are shown as filled triangles, with the number of real cells for which the determination was made at the specified value of GC1 indicated by the open symbols. For some cells, it was not possible to determine an upper and lower bound for a GC1 of 8 nS, because for these cells (8 out of 17 cells tested) there was no range of GC2 values that allowed successful propagation from element 1 to element 3. Note that the lower bounds of allowable values of GC2 are nearly constant, whereas the upper bounds rise progressively with increasing values of GC2.


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Fig. 6.   A: results obtained from cell used for Figs. 2-5 with a range of values of GC1 and GC2. For each set of values, results are 1 of 3 alternatives: 1) failure of conduction from element 1 to element 2 (open circle ), 2) successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 but conduction failure from element 2 to element 3 (bullet ), or 3) successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and also successful conduction from element 2 to element 3 (*). For GC1 values of 8 and 10 nS, there is a lower bound of GC2 for successful conduction (transition between bullet  and *) and also an upper bound of GC2 for successful conduction (transition between * and open circle ). Cell M112097g,c is depicted. B: statistical summary of results obtained from multiple experiments in which we coupled an isolated cell between 2 LR model cells and obtained lower (black-triangle) and upper (triangle ) bounds for GC2 at 3 different values of GC1. Error bars indicate SE.

Our ability to adjust the effective size of any element in the strand allowed us to test the effect of lowering the size of the central element of a strand composed of three elements, the central element of which was a real cell, whereas the other two elements were LR model cells. In our previous work (5, 6, 24), we showed that a difference in size between the two elements of a cell pair had profound effects on the ability of action potentials to conduct. Specifically, conduction occurs more easily (at lower values of coupling conductance) from a large cell to a small cell compared with conduction from a small cell to a large cell. For a strand of three cells initially all the same size, making the central cell smaller introduces more complex interactions, because we might expect that this change in size of element 2 would produce facilitation of conduction from element 1 to element 2 but inhibition of conduction from element 2 to element 3. We tested this hypothesis with experiments on five cells used as the central element of a three-cell strand in which we decreased the effective size of the central element. Figure 7 shows results obtained from one of these real cells coupled between two LR model cells with a GC1 of 8 nS. For this particular real cell, the current threshold was 2.8 nA for a pulse duration of 2 ms. Thus we initially normalized the size of the real cell with a Z2 of 1.08 to produce a current threshold of 2.6 nA, and we thus refer to this condition as a size factor of 1.0 with respect to the LR model cells. We performed an analysis (not shown) for this cell identical to that illustrated in Fig. 2 for a different cell to determine the critical coupling conductance for this real cell paired with an LR model cell, using the real cell either as the leader of the cell pair (as in Fig. 2A, with a critical coupling conductance determined to be 6.6 nS) and also as the follower of this cell pair (as in Fig. 2B, with a critical coupling conductance determined to be 5.6 nS). Each part of Fig. 7 illustrates simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. When we set GC2 to 6 nS (Fig. 7A), we obtained successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 but conduction failure from element 2 to element 3. When we set GC2 equal to either 7 nS (Fig. 7B) or 8 nS (Fig. 7C) we obtained successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and then to element 3. However, when we set GC2 to 9 nS, we obtained conduction failure between elements 1 and 2. These results show a window of allowable values of GC2 between 7 and 8 nS for successful propagation from element 1 to element 3.


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Fig. 7.   Results obtained with a real cell coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 8 nS, with size of the real cell normalized to a current threshold of 2.6 nA. Each part illustrates simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. GC2 is set to 6 (A), 7 (B), 8 (C), or 9 (D) nS. Dotted, solid, and dashed lines are for elements 1, 2, and 3, respectively. B and C illustrate successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and on to element 3. A shows conduction from element 1 to element 2 but failure from element 2 to element 3. D shows conduction failure from element 1 to element 2. Cell M112697g,f is depicted.

When we then lowered the size of the central real cell of the three-element strand of Fig. 7 by a factor of two (now setting Z2 equal to 2.16, double the previous value of Z2, thus making the current threshold for real cell element 2 now 1.3 nA for a pulse duration of 2 ms), the results were dramatically changed, as shown in Fig. 8. Figure 8A shows failure of conduction from element 2 to element 3 at a GC2 of 7 nS. Successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and then to element 3 occurred with a GC2 of 8 nS (Fig. 8B) and a GC2 of 20 nS (Fig. 8C) and also at all GC2 values between 8 and 20 nS, indicating a much larger window of allowable values of GC2 for successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and then to element 3, produced by lowering the size of the central element of the strand. For a GC2 of 22 nS (Fig. 8D), conduction failure occurred between element 1 and element 2. In terms of the lower and upper bounds for successful conduction, reduction of the size of the central element of the strand by a factor of two slightly increased the lower bound (from 7 to 8 nS) but dramatically increased the upper bound (from 8 to 20 nS) of values of GC2. We found that the mean values of the lower bounds changed from 6.7 ± 0.2 nS (n = 9), for a size factor of 1.0, to 8.4 ± 0.2 nS (n = 5), for a size factor of 0.5 (P < 0.005), whereas the upper bounds increased from 8.3 ± 0.4 nS (n = 9), for a size factor of 1.0, to 24.4 ± 3.0 nS (n = 5), for a size factor of 0.5 (P < 0.005).


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Fig. 8.   Results obtained with same real cell as in Fig. 7, coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 8 nS, with size of the real cell multiplied by a factor of 0.5. Each part illustrates simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1. GC2 is set to 7 (A), 8 (B), 20 (C), or 22 (D) nS. Dotted, solid, and dashed lines are for elements 1, 2, and 3, respectively. B and C illustrate successful conduction from element 1 to element 2 and on to element 3. A shows conduction from element 1 to element 2 but failure from element 2 to element 3. D shows conduction failure from element 1 to element 2. Cell M112697g,f is depicted.

The mechanism for the increased ability to propagate when the size of the central element is reduced is illustrated in Fig. 9. These results were obtained with the same real cell as for Figs. 7 and 8, with a GC1 of 8 nS and with the size of the real cell normalized to a factor of 1.0 with respect to the model cells (Fig. 9, A and B) or a factor of 0.5 (Fig. 9, C and D). Figure 9, A and C, shows the membrane potentials from simulations of elements 1 and 3 with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1, with GC2 set to 10 nS. For Fig. 9A (size factor 1.0), conduction failure occurs between elements 1 and 2. For Fig. 9C, conduction occurs from element 1 to element 2 and then on to element 3, consistent with the results shown in Figs. 7 and 8, in which we showed that the upper bound for values of GC2 was 8 nS, for a size factor of 1.0, and 20 nS, for a size factor of 0.5. Figure 9, B and D, shows the coupling currents associated with the results of Fig. 9, A and C, respectively. Coupling current IC1 (dotted lines) is the current flowing from model cell element 1 to real cell element 2, and coupling current IC2 (dashed lines) is the current flowing from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3. The difference current (IC1 - IC2, solid lines) is the net coupling current available for depolarization of the real cell. Note that the actual current applied to the real cell is Z2 · (IC1 - IC2) to account for the normalization of cell size. For Fig. 9B, IC1 is large, but the difference current IC1 - IC2 is substantially reduced by the presence of a large current IC2, and this prevents the activation of real cell element 2. For Fig. 9D (size factor 0.5 for central cell), the size of IC1 and the difference current are nearly the same as for Fig. 9B (size factor 1.0), but the central cell (with size factor 0.5 and a Z2 of 2.16) requires only one-half as much difference current for activation compared with the requirement for a size factor of 1.0 (and a Z2 of 1.08), and thus the activation of the central cell occurs. After activation of the central cell, the membrane potential of this cell rises rapidly and thus raises IC2, which then supplies the charge to depolarize element 3 to complete the propagational process.


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Fig. 9.   Results obtained with same real cell as in Figs. 7 and 8, coupled between 2 LR model cells with a GC1 of 8 nS, with size of the real cell multiplied by a factor of 1.0 (A and B) or 0.5 (C and D). A and C show membrane potentials from simulations of elements 1 and 3, with a recording from the real cell during repetitive stimulation of element 1, with GC2 set to 10 nS. Dotted, solid, and dashed lines are for elements 1, 2, and 3, respectively. B and D show coupling currents associated with results of A and C, respectively. Coupling current IC1 (dotted lines) is current flowing from model cell element 1 to real cell element 2, and coupling current IC2 (dashed lines) is current flowing from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3. Difference current (IC1 - IC2, solid lines) is net coupling current available for depolarization of the real cell. Cell M112697g,f is depicted.


    DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Our use of theoretical model cells within the same strand as the real cells makes the results dependent on the validity of the cell membrane model with respect to action potential initiation and propagation. The membrane properties and excitability of the LR model cell are quite consistent with the values obtained from the real cells when recorded in isolation. For 21 real cells, we measured resting membrane potential (-85.9 ± 0.6 mV) and maximum dV/dt (309.5 ± 25.4 V/s) that can be compared with LR model values of -86.4 mV and 420 V/s, respectively, under the same conditions of a discrete time step of 80 µs. As discussed in METHODS, we normalized the effective size of each of the real cells studied to have the same current threshold (2.6 nA) for a repetitive current pulse of 2-ms duration as the LR model cell. As shown in Fig. 2, the voltage threshold for the LR model cell is also similar to that of the real cell, as determined by the peak value of the subthreshold response of the follower cell when conduction fails, resulting in a value of -64 mV for the LR model cell and -65 mV for the real cell. We also found a nearly symmetrical determination of the critical coupling conductance for propagation from the real cell to the model cell (5.9 ± 0.2 nS) compared with the critical coupling conductance for propagation from the model cell to the real cell (7.3 ± 0.2 nS). Comparison of the actual propagation delays we measured with conduction velocities determined from intact guinea pig ventricular tissue is more difficult. Normal ventricular tissue has coupling conductance values much higher than the low values we used to produce propagation failure. Kagiyama et al. (7) determined a conduction velocity of 79.4 cm/s in guinea pig papillary muscles. Shaw and Rudy (13) used an estimate of 2,500 nS for coupling of adjacent cells of normal ventricular tissue and showed that a one-dimensional strand of LR model cells, with an assumed cell length of 100 µm, produced a conduction velocity of 54 cm/s and that a conduction velocity as low as 0.26 cm/s could be obtained by uniformly decreasing the coupling conductance to 6 nS. The effective conduction velocity for critically low values of coupling conductance for the three-cell strands that we created is in the range of 0.4 cm/s, based on a conduction delay of up to 50 ms over a length of 200 µm (see Fig. 4).

In our previous work with this model system, we restricted our study to action potential conduction between two real cells (or a real cell and a model cell) connected as a cell pair. The inclusion of additional elements of the strand has allowed us to investigate the interactions between cells at a higher level of complexity.

These studies have illustrated the following features of propagation through a linear strand of cells. 1) When the value of GC1 was set at a value that was only slightly greater than that required for successful propagation between a model cell and a real cell, the addition of a third element of the strand either prevented conduction from element 1 to element 2 (when GC2 was high) or allowed conduction from element 1 to element 2 but not conduction from element 2 to element 3 (when GC2 was low). 2) For higher levels of GC1, there was an allowable window of values of GC2 for successful conduction from element 1 through element 3. The size of this allowable window of GC2 values increased with increasing values of GC1, and this increase was produced by increases in the upper bound of GC2 values.

The mechanism of these interactions can be understood based on the net coupling current that is available to the central cell for depolarization (determining success or failure of activation of central cell) and the magnitude of the coupling current that can be passed on to the third element of the strand. These results suggest that the overall success or failure of conduction through a structure of cells that has a spatially inhomogeneous distribution of coupling conductances cannot be predicted simply by the average or the minimum value of coupling conductance but may depend on the actual spatial distribution of these conductances.

The interactions between the successive propagational processes can be either negative or positive. For a specific example of a negative interaction, consider the data shown in Fig. 4D. We showed in Fig. 2B that, for this real cell, conduction to the real cell was successful for a coupling conductance >5.9 nS when it was connected only to element 1 and element 1 was repetitively stimulated. However, Fig. 4D shows that conduction fails between element 1 and the same real cell even if they are coupled at 8 nS if the value of GC2 is 9 nS or greater. For a specific example of a positive interaction, consider the data shown in Fig. 4B. We showed in Fig. 2A, for this same real cell, that conduction from the real cell to the model cell (as a cell pair) failed at a coupling conductance <6.4 nS. However, conduction from the real cell to the model cell succeeds in Fig. 4B when GC2 is only 6 nS when the value of GC1 is 8 nS.

Spatial inhomogeneity in the size of individual cells or the size of groups of well-coupled cells may also play a role in the success or failure of propagation. Figures 7 and 8 illustrate the effects of varying the size of the central element of a strand of three elements. In the present work, we specifically lowered the size of the central element. This element is a follower for the conduction between element 1 and element 2 and is a leader for the conduction between element 2 and element 3. In our previous work (24), we systematically altered the size of the leader or the follower of a cell pair and determined the changes in coupling conductance required for successful conduction. When we decreased the size of the follower of a cell pair by 50%, we found that the critical coupling conductance for propagation from a model cell to a real cell (as represented in the present work by conduction from model element 1 to real cell element 2) was reduced by ~50%. When we decreased the size of the leader of a cell pair by 50%, we found that the critical coupling conductance for propagation from a real cell to a model cell (as represented in the present work by conduction from real cell element 2 to model cell element 3) was increased by ~80%. For the strand system, the results are more complex. When we set GC1 to 8 nS and then determined the upper and lower bound for GC2 for propagation from element 1 to element 3, we found that lowering the size of the central element by 50% had almost no effect on the lower bound for conduction (changing from 7 nS to only 8 nS in the example of Figs. 7 and 8) but substantially increased the upper bound for conduction (increasing from 8 to 20 nS).

There are still substantial differences between the representation of a linear strand in our model system and the actual three-dimensional syncytial structure of cardiac muscle, although our development of the strand approach to the study of real isolated cardiac cells allows more levels of complexity than the previous technique of studying cell pairs. In particular, we have not included the effects of lateral connections and anisotropy of conduction that may play very critical roles in determining the conduction delays and conduction failure that may occur with discontinuous conduction (2). The combination of experimental and theoretical techniques that we use is a unique approach to this issue, representing a fusion of direct experimental studies on isolated cells and theoretical simulations of action potential initiation and conduction. Both techniques have significant limitations that we try to minimize. It would be desirable to simultaneously record from three or more isolated cells and then combine these cells into a strand with specified values of coupling conductance. Unfortunately, the experimental difficulty of sustained recording from isolated cardiac cells limits the practical use of this technique to one or two simultaneous recordings. Analyzing initiation and conduction from a purely theoretical strand would make the results completely dependent on the properties chosen for the cell models, and these properties are only an approximation of the real cellular properties. Our combined experimental and theoretical approach allows us to substitute real cells for specific elements in a theoretical strand at locations where critical processes are occurring.


    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This work was partially supported by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant HL-22562 (R. Joyner), the Emory Egleston Children's Research Center, Netherlands Heart Foundation Grant 92.310, and Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research Grant 805-06-152.


    FOOTNOTES

The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Address for reprint requests: R. W. Joyner, Dept. of Pediatrics, Emory Univ., 2040 Ridgewood Dr. NE, Atlanta, GA 30322.

Received 5 June 1998; accepted in final form 28 September 1998.


    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 276(2):H391-H400
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