The Role of the Frank-Starling Law in the Transduction of Cellular Work to Whole Organ Pump Function: A Computational Modeling Analysis

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Abstract

We have developed a multi-scale biophysical electromechanics model of the rat left ventricle at room temperature. This model has been applied to investigate the relative roles of cellular scale length dependent regulators of tension generation on the transduction of work from the cell to whole organ pump function. Specifically, the role of the length dependent Ca2+ sensitivity of tension (Ca50), filament overlap tension dependence, velocity dependence of tension, and tension dependent binding of Ca2+ to Troponin C on metrics of efficient transduction of work and stress and strain homogeneity were predicted by performing simulations in the absence of each of these feedback mechanisms. The length dependent Ca50 and the filament overlap, which make up the Frank-Starling Law, were found to be the two dominant regulators of the efficient transduction of work. Analyzing the fiber velocity field in the absence of the Frank-Starling mechanisms showed that the decreased efficiency in the transduction of work in the absence of filament overlap effects was caused by increased post systolic shortening, whereas the decreased efficiency in the absence of length dependent Ca50 was caused by an inversion in the regional distribution of strain.

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Niederer, S. A., & Smith, N. P. (2009). The Role of the Frank-Starling Law in the Transduction of Cellular Work to Whole Organ Pump Function: A Computational Modeling Analysis. PLoS Computational Biology, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000371

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