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Cellular Biology |
From the Department of Physiology (J.P.K., S.R.), University of Bern, Switzerland; Cardiac Bioelectricity Research and Training Center (Y.R.), Departments of Biomedical Engineering, Physiology & Biophysics, and Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
Correspondence to Jan P. Kucera, Department of Physiology, University of Bern, Bühlplatz 5, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland. E-mail kucera{at}pyl.unibe.ch
| Abstract |
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Key Words: action potential conduction sodium current gap junctions intercalated disks slow conduction
| Introduction |
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Even under physiological conditions, gap junctions represent discrete resistive barriers for the flow of current. As shown in single cell strands,69 these locations of increased resistance result in a discontinuous pattern of conduction at the cellular level: across junctions, conduction is characterized by local conduction delays. The duration of these delays (and thus conduction velocity,
) is strongly dependent on the degree of gap-junctional coupling.3,4,9
In immunocytochemical studies, it was observed that Nav1.5 sodium channels (NaChs) are preferentially located in intercalated disks (IDs) between neighboring myocytes.1013 The observation that NaChs are concentrated at intercellular junctions led to the hypothesis that this colocalization is a physiological adaptive mechanism to overcome the local junctional resistive barriers and hence to stabilize conduction.
It was the aim of this study (1) to determine the subcellular distribution of NaChs in cultures of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes and (2) to evaluate the functional consequences of a preferential localization of NaChs in IDs using a mathematical model of conduction. In the cultures, we observed colocalization of NaChs with Cx43. In the model, the presence of a large INa in IDs led to a modified dependence of
on gap-junctional coupling. This effect was caused by large intercellular cleft currents and potentials induced by the large density of INa. This suggests that the localization of NaChs in IDs leads to extracellular cleft interactions that modulate the transfer of the action potential (AP) from one cell to the next.14
| Materials and Methods |
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-subunit of rat cardiac type NaCh; Alomone) and Cx43 (mouse anti-Cx43 monoclonal antibody; Chemicon) were diluted at 1:10 (rH1) and 1:100 (Cx43) in a buffer containing 1% goat serum and 0.15% Triton X-100. Preparations were exposed to these antibodies for 1 hour at 20°C followed by 16 hours at 4°C. They were then washed with PBS and incubated with the secondary antibodies for 2 hours at 37°C (CY3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG for rH1, Jackson ImmunoResearch; Alexa 488 conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG for Cx43, Molecular Probes). Animals were obtained from the central animal facility of the University Hospital of Bern (Bern, Switzerland). They were used according to the ethical principles and guidelines of the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences.
Mathematical Model of Conduction
The latest version of the Luo-Rudy dynamic (LRd) ventricular cell model1517 was used to simulate conduction along linear strands of 64 cells. As shown in Figure 1, the membrane of every cell (length L: 100 µm; radius r: 11 µm) was discretized into 10 axial patches (length Lp: 10 µm) and 2 disk (junctional) patches, one at each end of the cell. Every patch had a capacitance proportional to its area (Cax and Cdisk, respectively) and generated transmembrane currents according to the LRd formulation. The intracellular potential (Vi) was computed at the nodes corresponding to the patches. The myoplasmic resistance between adjacent nodes, Rmyo, was
myo · Lp/
r2, where
myo is the myoplasmic resistivity. The last node within a cell was connected to the first node in the next cell through a gap-junctional resistance Rgap. As done previously,4 a value of 150
· cm was used for
myo and a control (normal) value of 395 k
(conductance: 2.534 µS) was used for Rgap.
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In a first approximation, we assumed that the extracellular resistance, including that of the intercellular cleft, is negligible and hence that the extracellular potential is 0 (noncleft model, Figure 1A). Under this assumption, the intracellular potential equals the transmembrane potential, Vm. However, in the very narrow intercellular clefts at IDs, this assumption is likely to be inadequate, especially when resistance in the radial direction (parallel to the cleft) is considered. Thus, extracellular potentials (Ve) in the clefts may be different from 0. Therefore, the circuit of Figure 1A was completed with a T-shaped network of two series axial resistances, each 1/2Rcl, and a radial cleft resistance Rradial connecting the cleft to the bulk extracellular space (cleft model, Figure 1B). Assuming that the cleft has a cylindrical shape, Rcl was set to
ext · w/
r2, where
ext is the extracellular resistivity and w the cleft width. According to Katz,18 the radial resistance was derived as
ext/8
w. A value of 150
· cm was used for
ext.
To evaluate the consequences of different subcellular distributions of NaChs on conduction, the maximal conductance for INa (gNa,max, representing the number of available NaChs in a given patch) was redistributed within the cells while the total number of NaChs per cell (
gNa,max) was kept constant. The following distribution patterns were studied: (1) gNa,max was distributed proportionally to patch area (uniform INa distribution); (2) gNa,max was set to 50%
gNa,max in each disk patch of the cell and to 0 in the axial patches (100% junctional INa localization); and (3): gNa,max was set to 25%
gNa,max in each disk patch and the remaining 50% was distributed uniformly over the axial patches (50% junctional INa localization).
By applying Kirchhoffs current law at every node and assuming that the LRd currents do not change over an arbitrarily small time interval
t (ie, between time t and time t+
t), we obtained a system of coupled first-order linear differential equations with constant coefficients, which was solved for Vm, Vi, and Ve by diagonalization. After solving for potentials at time t+
t, the LRd currents were recomputed4,15 and the procedure was iterated. A fixed
t of 0.005 ms was used. Results did not differ with a smaller
t. Propagating APs were initiated in cell 1;
was computed by linear regression of the activation times (defined as the time when Vi reached -30 mV) of cells 17 to 48.
| Results |
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Mathematical Modeling of Conduction
Because
primarily depends on the degree of gap-junctional coupling,4 we evaluated steady-state
for gap-junctional conductances ranging from 0 to 2.534 µS (normal value, 100%).
First, we assessed the dependence of
on coupling under the assumption that NaCh distribution is uniform and that extracellular currents and potentials in the intercellular clefts do not influence conduction (noncleft model). As shown previously,4
decreased with decreasing coupling from
55 cm/s at 2.534 µS (100% of normal) to <1 cm/s at 0.00634 µS (0.25% of normal). When we assumed that NaChs are localized at cell-cell junctions but that cleft currents and potentials do not influence conduction, we observed only a minimal relative increase of
(<1.5%). When we assumed that NaChs are distributed uniformly but that extracellular cleft currents and potentials can modulate conduction (cleft model), we observed a very slight reduction of
(<0.5%) over the entire range of cleft widths investigated (20 to 1000 nm).
Localization of INa in Intercalated Disks Modulates Conduction Through Cleft Currents and Potentials
In contrast to the negligible effects described above, conduction was prominently influenced by cleft currents and potentials under the dual assumption that INa is concentrated at IDs and that cleft currents and potentials are significant (cleft model). In Figure 3,
was evaluated for 100% junctional INa as a function of cleft width for various degrees of coupling. In wide clefts (>500 nm), there was only a negligible effect on
when compared with the noncleft model. However, for narrower clefts, the following effects were observed. For higher degrees of coupling (50% to 100%),
became progressively and monotonically slower when cleft width was narrowed. For medium-range degrees of coupling (3% to 10%), a biphasic behavior was observed: with decreasing cleft width,
exhibited a progressive increase followed by a decrease with further cleft narrowing. For low degrees of coupling (0.3% to 1%), this initial increase was substantial and occurred abruptly at cleft widths of 40 to 50 nm.
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This behavior indicates that the dynamic interactions between INa and cleft potentials cause two opposing phenomena: at normal to moderately reduced gap-junctional coupling, these interactions result in an impairment of conduction, whereas, under conditions of substantially reduced gap-junctional conductance, they result in an enhancement of conduction.
Impairment of Conduction at Normal to Moderately Reduced Coupling
For 100% junctional INa localization and normal gap-junctional coupling,
was 55.0 cm/s in the noncleft model. When 45-nm clefts were introduced,
decreased to 37.3 cm/s. This slowing phenomenon was specifically investigated as illustrated in Figure 4. Conduction was first simulated in the 64-cell strand using the noncleft model. Then, a single 45-nm cleft was introduced at the junction between the two central cells (32 and 33) while all other junctions were maintained with the noncleft formulation. Before introduction of the cleft at the central junction (Figure 4A, top), steady-state conduction was, as expected, discontinuous at the cellular level and characterized by local conduction delays across the junctions. The high INa density at the junctional membranes (peak: 3850 µA/µF, an order of magnitude greater than for uniform INa distribution) reflects the greatly elevated number of locally available NaChs. However, peak INa integrated over a given cell was not different between uniform and 100% junctional INa repartitions.
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When the 45-nm cleft was introduced at the central junction (Figure 4A, middle and bottom), INa was associated with a current flowing from the bulk extracellular space through Rradial. This current is necessary to maintain electroneutrality of the cleft space and satisfies Kirchhoffs current law in the model. It induced a large negative extracellular cleft potential (Ve,cleft) that peaked at -55 mV. Comparison between Ve,cleft and the potential difference that would have been induced across Rradial by a current equal to INa summed over the pre- and postjunctional membranes (Figure 4A, bottom) confirms that INa was the major determinant of Ve,cleft. This large negative Ve,cleft resulted in depolarization of both pre- and postjunctional transmembrane potentials (Vm) that largely overshot Vm of adjacent patches. This prominent overshoot brought Vm close to the sodium reversal potential, ENa (
+66 mV). As a consequence, the driving force for INa (ENa-Vm) was greatly reduced, attenuating INa even before voltage-dependent inactivation had started. Therefore, the large Ve,cleft resulted in a
50% reduction of INa in the junctional membranes (Figure 4A, middle right).
In cell 33, this "self-attenuation" of INa resulted in a reduction of the current source, and, consequently, in slower upstrokes and delayed distal activation of that cell. As shown in Figure 4B, conduction beyond the central cleft progressed with a delay compared with the conduction pattern observed when the noncleft model was used for all junctions. Thus, under conditions of normal coupling and 100% junctional INa, conduction is impaired in the cleft model due to self-attenuation of INa.
Enhancement of Conduction at Greatly Reduced Gap-Junctional Coupling
The same approach (modeling a 45-nm cleft at the central junction in the 64-cell strand while using the noncleft model for the other junctions) was used in Figure 5 to investigate the acceleration of conduction when coupling was 3% of normal. In the noncleft model,
was slow (9.1 cm/s);
increased to 18.7 cm/s when 45-nm clefts were introduced at all junctions. The top panels of Figure 5A illustrate conduction in the noncleft model. Because of the low gap-junctional conductance, charge generated by transmembrane currents in a given cell remained essentially confined within that cell. This resulted in an almost simultaneous activation of the entire cell. Furthermore, slow conduction was characterized by long intercellular conduction delays (>1 ms). Peak INa was high in the junctional patches (3850 µA/µF) and was not different from peak INa observed during normal coupling (see Figure 4A, top).
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When a 45-nm cleft was introduced between cells 32 and 33 only (Figure 5A, middle and bottom), INa was again associated with a current flowing from the bulk extracellular space through Rradial. Because of the junctional INa localization, this current was very prominent and induced a large negative Ve,cleft that peaked at -60 mV. Again, as shown in Figure 5A (bottom), comparison between Ve,cleft and the potential difference that would have been induced across Rradial by a current equal to INa summed over the pre- and postjunctional membranes confirms that INa was the major determinant of Ve,cleft. Also, the negative Ve,cleft led to a large overshoot of Vm of the prejunctional patch. Through the same mechanism as described previously (self-attenuation due to a reduction of the driving force), INa in the prejunctional membrane was reduced by
30%.
Importantly, the negative Ve,cleft also led to a synchronous and suprathreshold depolarization of Vm in the postjunctional membrane, where it resulted in voltage-gated activation of INa. Compared with the noncleft model, this activation occurred substantially earlier. As shown in Figure 5B, the early activation of postjunctional INa resulted in earlier activation of cell 33 and of more distal cells. Therefore, intercellular interactions through Ve,cleft were characterized by both self-attenuation of INa and early activation of postjunctional INa. Whereas reduction of INa alone would have resulted in conduction slowing through a reduction of source current, the effect of early activation prevailed and resulted in net acceleration of conduction.
The interaction between these two mechanisms, depending on coupling and cleft width, explains the biphasic behavior of
depicted in Figure 3. Reducing cleft width increased the amplitude of Ve,cleft and thus promoted self-attenuation, thereby slowing conduction. However, the triggering of an AP in the postjunctional membrane by Ve,cleft explains the abrupt increase of
at low degrees of coupling and narrow cleft widths.
Dependence of Velocity on Gap-Junctional Coupling Is Attenuated by the Preferential Localization of Sodium Channels at Intercalated Disks
Figure 6 summarizes the dependence of
on the degree of coupling. Velocities obtained with 100% junctional INa in the noncleft model are indicated by solid curves. Dotted curves indicate
for 100% junctional INa when 35-nm clefts were incorporated in the entire strand. Although recent work13 strongly suggests that most of INa is conducted through the Nav1.5 channel isoform, which is located in IDs, we nevertheless examined the possibility that a fraction of INa enters the cell through the nonjunctional membrane as well. Therefore, simulations were also performed with only 50% junctional INa localization. The results for this 50% localization and using 10-nm clefts are indicated by dashed curves.
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For the cleft model and for both 100% and 50% junctional INa, the slope of the curve relating
to gap-junctional coupling was smaller compared with the curve characterizing the noncleft model. This indicates that the dependence of
on coupling was attenuated: a given reduction of coupling led to a smaller reduction of
when clefts were incorporated. Compared with the noncleft model, when the degree of coupling was >10%, self-attenuation in the cleft model resulted in slower conduction velocities for both 100% and 50% junctional INa. However, when coupling was reduced below
10%, conduction was faster, revealing the early activation of INa mediated by cleft potentials.
Is Conduction Possible Without Gap- Junctional Coupling?
In Figure 6, the plateau reached by
at very low degrees of coupling for 100% junctional INa and 35-nm clefts suggests that under these conditions, conduction might be possible during complete uncoupling (0%). This possibility was confirmed in an additional simulation (not shown) where
was 14.8 cm/s. However, conduction without coupling was only possible when the fraction of junctional INa was close to 100%. Nevertheless, when this fraction was 50%, conduction was still possible at very low degrees of coupling, for which propagation failed in the noncleft model. Whereas the critical degree of coupling before conduction failure was 0.25% of normal in the noncleft model (critical
: 0.46 cm/s), this value decreased to 0.11% when 10-nm clefts were incorporated (critical
: 1.67 cm/s). This therefore suggests that under conditions of very low coupling, interactions through Ve,cleft may be crucial for the success of conduction.
| Discussion |
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on gap-junctional coupling. This modulation is due to cleft potentials based on large cleft currents. These findings provide a functional explanation and suggest a physiological role for the localization of NaChs in IDs.
Mechanisms of Cardiac Conduction
It is widely accepted that connexons are the structures forming the electrical connections between the cytoplasmic compartments of adjacent cardiomyocytes, thus permitting the flow of local circuit current and the propagation of the AP. This concept was challenged by Sperelakis and colleagues, who proposed that cardiac conduction could occur without the need for low-resistance connections between cells through a mechanism that they called "electric field mechanism."19,20 In a recent review,21 Sperelakis and McConnell pointed out that the increased density of NaChs in IDs would facilitate this mechanism and suggested the possibility that cardiac conduction could be based on multiple mechanisms acting concurrently (electric field, current through gap junctions, accumulation of K+ in the cleft). The principle of the electric field mechanism corresponds to the early activation of postjunctional INa described in the present study: the negative cleft potential during firing of the prejunctional membrane acts to depolarize the postjunctional membrane to threshold. In the model studies of Sperelakis and colleagues,
ranged up to 32 cm/s in the absence of gap-junctional coupling under conditions where the excitability of the junctional membranes was increased.20 In the present study, where a realistic model of the ionic currents was used, a maximal
of 14.8 cm/s was observed in the absence of coupling and required 100% INa localization at the IDs. Yet, both velocities are too low compared with normal velocities observed in ventricular tissue (>50 cm/s). The electric field mechanism alone therefore cannot account for normal cardiac conduction.
The possibility of impulse transmission between two cardiac cells in the absence of resistive coupling was also investigated by Hogues et al.22 In their model study, where only a uniform distribution of ionic currents was investigated, they observed changes in the cleft potential that were too small to permit activation of the downstream cell under normal conditions and they estimated the contribution of electric field transmission to be
30 to 130 times smaller than transmission through gap-junctional resistive coupling. They nevertheless discussed the possibility that, under conditions of reduced gap-junctional coupling, the electric field mechanism could provide an important contribution to transmission.
To our knowledge, the present study is the first to simulate cardiac conduction in a model where both resistive current through gap junctions and the electric field mechanism were incorporated. Moreover, motivated by the immunocytochemical findings of other researchers and our own, we investigated the effects of uniform versus nonuniform INa distribution. We conclude that the degree of gap-junctional coupling is the principal determinant of conduction, but that in the presence of electric field interactions through cleft potentials, preferential localization of INa in IDs modulates the dependence of
on coupling. Obviously, the latter statement will await experimental support. However, because of the technical difficulty of measuring the extracellular potential in very narrow intercellular clefts, experimental approaches appear very challenging.
Study Limitations
The principal limitation of the present study is the simplification that was made concerning cleft shape and the fact that the cleft potential was discretized only along the fiber axis. The shape of the cleft is known to be tortuous and irregular.23 Increased tortuosity of the cleft is expected to be associated with an increased radial resistance Rradial. In Figures 3 and 6, this would translate into a leftward shift of the curves without changing their general behavior. The results of Hogues et al,22 who discretized cleft potential at several nodes in the radial direction, suggest that tortuosity could account for an increase in Rradial by a factor of
2.
A major unknown is obviously the cleft width, w. This uncertainty motivated us to use different values of w spanning a range from 20 to 1000 nm. Clefts are certainly not wider than 1000 nm (such clefts would be visible using optical microscopy). In gap-junction plaques, connexons determine an intermembrane distance of
5 nm,24 a value that would define the absolute minimal value for w. These plaques, however, occupy only a small fraction of the ID area (in the range of 1%). Between them, the cleft is wider.23 In our study, the most prominent effects of electric field interactions were observed in the range of w=20 to 50 nm when gap-junctional coupling was reduced; however, these effects fell dramatically for w>50 nm. Therefore, to better evaluate the possibility that these interactions play a role in vivo, it would be of greatest value to obtain detailed morphological information about cleft morphology and tortuosity and to model these microstructural details in a future study.
Another issue that arises is the question of a possible depletion of Na+ in the cleft, which would decrease the driving force for INa. Assuming that no ionic exchange occurs between the cleft and the bulk extracellular space, then all Na+ ions leave the cleft through junctional NaChs. Under this assumption, Na+ depletion can be estimated by integration of junctional INa. In our model, it would amount to
12 mmol/L in a 20-nm cleft and decrease the Na+ Nernst potential by only
3 mV. This value could however be larger if the complicated cleft microstructure gave rise to microdomains between which Na+ diffusion would be restricted. Modeling microstructural compartments and ionic exchanges between them would provide valuable information about ion concentrations in the cleft.
Finally, an uncertainty remains concerning the fraction of functional NaChs that are located in IDs. Although recent work13 suggests that this fraction might be substantial, more research will be necessary to identify not only the location of different NaCh isoforms but also to quantify their respective functional contribution to total INa.
Conduction in Cx43-Deficient Animals
Cx43 knockout mice are used to study the relationship between the degree of coupling and conduction characteristics. Although some research groups reported a
30% slower in Cx43 knockout heterozygous myocardium compared with wild-type tissue,25,26 others did not observe any significant differences.27,28 More intriguing is the observation that in cardiac-restricted Cx43 knockout mice, where Cx43 expression was reduced by 95%,
was slowed by only
50%.29
In cardiac fiber, total axial resistance (which determines
) is the sum of its myoplasmic and gap-junctional contributions. In the LRd model, the myoplasmic contribution is 50% (for normal coupling). Because murine myocytes have a smaller diameter compared with the LRd model cell, it is possible that the myoplasmic contribution is higher and that the contribution of Cx43 is relatively lower. This could explain the relatively small effects of reduced Cx43 expression on conduction in some studies. However, the modulation of
by the electric field mechanism might provide an additional explanation.
Clinical and Physiological Implications
Gap-junctional uncoupling is a hallmark of short- and long-term ischemia, and it is well known that slow conduction favors the occurrence of reentrant arrhythmias. Early INa activation by cleft potentials might act to protect the myocardium against very slow conduction (<1 cm/s) and microreentry. However, it could also make moderately slow conduction (a few centimeters per second) more robust, which would then promote arrhythmias.
Under conditions of normal coupling, the physiological role of the self-attenuation of INa in IDs is yet unclear, because it would act to depress conduction. Intuitively, one would think that the function and distribution of NaChs would be such as to maximize
. In this study, we only investigated conduction in the direction of fiber orientation. In the direction transverse to myocardial fibers, where the pattern of cell-to-cell coupling is different, conduction is slower. To which extent the cleft-potential mechanisms are involved in transverse propagation and, ultimately, in determining the ratio of longitudinal to transverse conduction velocities needs to be further investigated. Although beyond the scope of this study, this question should be evaluated in two- or three-dimensional models of cardiac tissue.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received September 20, 2002; revision received October 28, 2002; accepted October 28, 2002.
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V. Haufe, J.M. Cordeiro, T. Zimmer, Y.S. Wu, S. Schiccitano, K. Benndorf, and R. Dumaine Contribution of neuronal sodium channels to the cardiac fast sodium current INa is greater in dog heart Purkinje fibers than in ventricles Cardiovasc Res, January 1, 2005; 65(1): 117 - 127. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. J. Mohler, I. Rivolta, C. Napolitano, G. LeMaillet, S. Lambert, S. G. Priori, and V. Bennett Nav1.5 E1053K mutation causing Brugada syndrome blocks binding to ankyrin-G and expression of Nav1.5 on the surface of cardiomyocytes PNAS, December 14, 2004; 101(50): 17533 - 17538. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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X. F. Figueroa, B. E. Isakson, and B. R. Duling Connexins: Gaps in Our Knowledge of Vascular Function Physiology, October 1, 2004; 19(5): 277 - 284. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Maass, A. Ghanem, J.-S. Kim, M. Saathoff, S. Urschel, G. Kirfel, R. Grummer, M. Kretz, T. Lewalter, K. Tiemann, et al. Defective Epidermal Barrier in Neonatal Mice Lacking the C-Terminal Region of Connexin43 Mol. Biol. Cell, October 1, 2004; 15(10): 4597 - 4608. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. D. Malhotra, V. Thyagarajan, C. Chen, and L. L. Isom Tyrosine-phosphorylated and Nonphosphorylated Sodium Channel {beta}1 Subunits Are Differentially Localized in Cardiac Myocytes J. Biol. Chem., September 24, 2004; 279(39): 40748 - 40754. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. London Staying Connected Without Connexin43: Can You Hear Me Now? Circ. Res., July 23, 2004; 95(2): 120 - 121. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Rohr Role of gap junctions in the propagation of the cardiac action potential Cardiovasc Res, May 1, 2004; 62(2): 309 - 322. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. G. Petrich, B. C. Eloff, D. L. Lerner, A. Kovacs, J. E. Saffitz, D. S. Rosenbaum, and Y. Wang Targeted Activation of c-Jun N-terminal Kinase in Vivo Induces Restrictive Cardiomyopathy and Conduction Defects J. Biol. Chem., April 9, 2004; 279(15): 15330 - 15338. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y. Rudy Conductive Bridges in Cardiac Tissue: A Beneficial Role or an Arrhythmogenic Substrate? Circ. Res., April 2, 2004; 94(6): 709 - 711. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. G. KLEBER and Y. RUDY Basic Mechanisms of Cardiac Impulse Propagation and Associated Arrhythmias Physiol Rev, April 1, 2004; 84(2): 431 - 488. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J.-A. Yao, D. E. Gutstein, F. Liu, G. I. Fishman, and A. L. Wit Cell Coupling Between Ventricular Myocyte Pairs From Connexin43-Deficient Murine Hearts Circ. Res., October 17, 2003; 93(8): 736 - 743. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. G. Kleber Cell-to-Cell Coupling Between Host and Donor Cells in the In Situ Myocardium Circ. Res., June 13, 2003; 92(11): 1176 - 1178. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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