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Circulation Research. 2009
Published online before print July 23, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.109.197590
A more recent version of this article appeared on August 14, 2009
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Submitted on March 20, 2009
Revised on June 11, 2009
Accepted on July 14, 2009

Dynamical Mechanism for Subcellular Alternans in Cardiac Myocytes

Stephen A. Gaeta ; Gil Bub ; Geoffrey W. Abbott ; and David J. Christini *

From the Greenberg Division of Cardiology (S.A.G., G.W.A., D.J.C.) and Department of Physiology, Biophysics and Systems Biology (S.A.G., D.J.C.), Weill Cornell Medical College, New York; and Department of Physiology (G.B.), Anatomy & Genetics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dchristi{at}med.cornell.edu.

Rationale: Cardiac repolarization alternans is an arrhythmogenic rhythm disturbance, manifested in individual myocytes as a beat-to-beat alternation of action potential durations and intracellular calcium transient magnitudes. Recent experimental studies have reported "subcellular alternans," in which distinct regions of an individual cell are seen to have counterphase calcium alternations, but the mechanism by which this occurs is not well understood. Although previous theoretical work has proposed a possible dynamical mechanism for subcellular alternans formation, no direct evidence for this mechanism has been reported in vitro. Rather, experimental studies have generally invoked fixed subcellular heterogeneities in calcium-cycling characteristics as the mechanism of subcellular alternans formation.

Objective: In this study, we have generalized the previously proposed dynamical mechanism to predict a simple pacing algorithm by which subcellular alternans can be induced in isolated cardiac myocytes in the presence or absence of fixed subcellular heterogeneity. We aimed to verify this hypothesis using computational modeling and to confirm it experimentally in isolated cardiac myocytes. Furthermore, we hypothesized that this dynamical mechanism may account for previous reports of subcellular alternans seen in statically paced, intact tissue.

Methods and Results: Using a physiologically realistic computational model of a cardiac myocyte, we show that our predicted pacing algorithm induces subcellular alternans in a manner consistent with theoretical predictions. We then use a combination of real-time electrophysiology and fluorescent calcium imaging to implement this protocol experimentally and show that it robustly induces subcellular alternans in isolated guinea pig ventricular myocytes. Finally, we use computational modeling to demonstrate that subcellular alternans can indeed be dynamically induced during static pacing of 1D fibers of myocytes during tissue-level spatially discordant alternans.

Conclusion: Here, we provide the first direct experimental evidence that subcellular alternans can be dynamically induced in cardiac myocytes. This proposed mechanism may contribute to subcellular alternans formation in the intact heart.


Key words: subcellular alternans • pattern formation • arrhythmia • calcium handling