
New Aspects of HERG K+ Channel Function Depending upon Cardiac Spatial Heterogeneity
Author(s) -
Zhang Pen,
Peng Guan,
Xiaolu Bai,
Zhigang Song
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0072181
Subject(s) - herg , repolarization , ventricular action potential , dofetilide , cardiac action potential , voltage clamp , patch clamp , long qt syndrome , biophysics , chemistry , ion channel , membrane potential , pharmacology , electrophysiology , qt interval , potassium channel , medicine , biology , biochemistry , receptor
HERG K + channel, the genetic counterpart of rapid delayed rectifier K + current in cardiac cells, is responsible for many cases of inherited and drug-induced long QT syndromes. HERG has unusual biophysical properties distinct from those of other K + channels. While the conventional pulse protocols in patch-clamp studies have helped us elucidate these properties, their limitations in assessing HERG function have also been progressively noticed. We employed AP-clamp techniques using physiological action potential waveforms recorded from various regions of canine heart to study HERG function in HEK293 cells and identified several novel aspects of HERG function. We showed that under AP-clamp I HERG increased gradually with membrane repolarization, peaked at potentials around 20–30 mV more negative than revealed by pulse protocols and at action potential duration (APD) to 60%-70% full repolarization, and fell rapidly at the terminal phase of repolarization. We found that the rising phase of I HERG was conferred by removal of inactivation and the decaying phase resulted from a fall in driving force, which were all determined by the rate of membrane repolarization. We identified regional heterogeneity and transmural gradient of I HERG when quantified with the area covered by I HERG trace. In addition, we observed regional and transmural differences of I HERG in response to dofetilide blockade. Finally, we characterized the influence of HERG function by selective inhibition of other ion currents. Based on our results, we conclude that the distinct biophysical properties of HERG reported by AP-clamp confer its unique function in cardiac repolarization thereby in antiarrhythmia and arrhythmogenesis.