z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Kv1.1 potassium channel subunit deficiency alters ventricular arrhythmia susceptibility, contractility, and repolarization
Author(s) -
Trosclair Krystle,
Si Man,
Watts Megan,
Gautier Nicole M.,
Voigt Niels,
Traylor James,
Bitay Miklós,
Baczko Istvan,
Dobrev Dobromir,
Hamilton Kathryn A.,
Bhuiyan Md. Shenuarin,
Dominic Paari,
Glasscock Edward
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.14702
Subject(s) - medicine , contractility , repolarization , potassium channel , cardiology , electrophysiology , cardiac electrophysiology , intracardiac injection , sudden cardiac death , cardiac transient outward potassium current , endocrinology , patch clamp
Epilepsy‐associated Kv1.1 voltage‐gated potassium channel subunits encoded by the Kcna1 gene have traditionally been considered absent in heart, but recent studies reveal they are expressed in cardiomyocytes where they could regulate intrinsic cardiac electrophysiology. Although Kv1.1 now has a demonstrated functional role in atria, its role in the ventricles has never been investigated. In this work, electrophysiological, histological, and gene expression approaches were used to explore the consequences of Kv1.1 deficiency in the ventricles of Kcna1 knockout (KO) mice at the organ, cellular, and molecular levels to determine whether the absence of Kv1.1 leads to ventricular dysfunction that increases the risk of premature or sudden death. When subjected to intracardiac pacing, KO mice showed normal baseline susceptibility to inducible ventricular arrhythmias (VA) but resistance to VA under conditions of sympathetic challenge with isoproterenol. Echocardiography revealed cardiac contractile dysfunction manifesting as decreased ejection fraction and fractional shortening. In whole‐cell patch‐clamp recordings, KO ventricular cardiomyocytes exhibited action potential prolongation indicative of impaired repolarization. Imaging, histological, and transcript analyses showed no evidence of structural or channel gene expression remodeling, suggesting that the observed deficits are likely electrogenic due to Kv1.1 deficiency. Immunoblots of patient heart samples detected the presence of Kv1.1 at relatively high levels, implying that Kv1.1 contributes to human cardiac electrophysiology. Taken together, this work describes an important functional role for Kv1.1 in ventricles where its absence causes repolarization and contractility deficits but reduced susceptibility to arrhythmia under conditions of sympathetic drive.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here