Studies were performed on canine cardiac Purkinje fibers to evaluate the effects of acidosis and bicarbonate (HCO−3) on action potential repolarization. Extracellular pH (pHe) was reduced from 7.4 to 6.8 by increasing carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration from 4 to 15% in a HCO3-buffered solution or by NaOH titration in a Hepes-buffered solution. Both types of acidosis produced a slowing of the rate of terminal repolarization (i.e., period of repolarization starting at about -60 mV and ending at the maximum diastolic potential) with an attendant increase in action potential duration of 10-20 ms. This was accompanied by a reduction in the maxium diastolic potential of 2-8 mV. In contrast, if the same pH change was made by keeping C02 concentration constant and lowering extracellular HCO−3 from 23.7 to 6.0 µM, in addition to the slowing of terminal repolarization, the plateau was markedly prolonged resulting in an additional 50- to 80-ms increase in action potential duration. If pHe was held constant at 7.4 and HCO3 reduced from 23.7 mM to 0 (Hepes-buffered solution), the changes in repolarization were nearly identical to those seen in 6.0 µM HCO−3 except that terminal repolarization was unchanged. This response was unaltered by doubling the concentration of Hepes. Reducing HCO−3 to 12.0 µM produced changes in re polarization of about one-half the magnitude of those in 6.0 µM HCO−3. These findings suggest that in Purkinje fibers, HCO−3 either acts as a current that slows repolarization or modulates the ionic currents responsible for repolarization. © 1979, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Spitzer, K. W., & Hogan, P. M. (1979). The effects of acidosis and bicarbonate on action potential repolarization in canine cardiac purkinje fibers. Journal of General Physiology, 73(2), 199–218. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.73.2.199
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