Editorials |
From the Head of Cardiac Electrophysiology, Imperial College, Department of Cardiology, St Marys Hospital, Praed Street, London.
Correspondence to Nicholas S. Peters, MD FRCP FHRS, Professor of Cardiology, Head of Cardiac Electrophysiology, Imperial College, St Marys Hospital, London; Dept of Cardiology, St Marys Hospital, Praed Street, London W2 1NY. Email n.peters@imperial.ac.uk
See related article, pages 12161224
Key Words: gap junction connexin conduction atrium
An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract. |
| Introduction |
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Gap-junctional membrane offers relatively low resistance to current flow, several orders of magnitude lower than ordinary cell membrane. But in passing through the cytoplasmic pathway from cell to cell in whole tissue, gap junctions remain relatively resistive discontinuities to the passage of ions and electrical charge through this cytoplasmic pathway, presenting a resistance across the gap junction (of nanometre width) approximately equivalent to that of the column of cytoplasm of an entire cell length (
100 µm).
Although electrophysiological, molecular and genetic techniques have been used to provide a very substantial body of knowledge of gap-junctional structure and function the precise mechanism by which the action potential is propagated from cell to cell, and the precise role of the gap junction remains unclear. It is thought to determine how much depolarizing current can pass from a depolarized cell to its neighbor in the process of impulse propagation, thus providing continuity across the
Related Article:
Circ. Res. 2006 99: 1216-1224.
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U. Lisewski, Y. Shi, U. Wrackmeyer, R. Fischer, C. Chen, A. Schirdewan, R. Juttner, F. Rathjen, W. Poller, M. H. Radke, et al. The tight junction protein CAR regulates cardiac conduction and cell-cell communication J. Exp. Med., September 29, 2008; 205(10): 2369 - 2379. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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