The calcium/calmodulin/kinase system and arrhythmogenic afterdepolarizations in bradycardia-related acquired long-QT syndrome

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Abstract

Background-Sustained bradycardia is associated with long-QT syndrome in human beings and causes spontaneous torsades de pointes in rabbits with chronic atrioventricular block (CAVB), at least partly by downregulating delayed-rectifier K+-current to cause action potential (AP) prolongation. We addressed the importance of altered Ca2+ handling, studying underlying mechanisms and consequences. Methods and Results-We measured ventricular cardiomyocyte [Ca2+]i (Indo1-AM), L-type Ca2+-current (ICaL) and APs (whole-cell perforated-patch), and Ca2+-handling protein expression (immunoblot). CAVB increased AP duration, cell shortening, systolic [Ca2+]i transients, and caffeine-induced [Ca2+]i release, and CAVB cells showed spontaneous early afterdepolarizations (EADs). ICaL density was unaffected by CAVB, but inactivation was shifted to more positive voltages, increasing the activation-inactivation overlap zone for ICaL window current. Ca2+-calmodulin- dependent protein kinase-II (CaMKII) autophosphorylation was enhanced in CAVB, indicating CaMKII activation. CAVB also enhanced CaMKII-dependent phospholamban-phosphorylation and accelerated [Ca2+]i-transient decay, consistent with phosphorylation-induced reductions in phospholamban inhibition of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-ATPase as a contributor to enhanced SR Ca 2+ loading. The CaMKII-inhibitor KN93 reversed CAVB-induced changes in caffeine-releasable [Ca2+ ]i and ICaL inactivation voltage and suppressed CAVB-induced EADs. Similarly, the calmodulin inhibitor W7 suppressed CAVB-induced ICaL inactivation voltage shifts and EADs, and a specific CaMKII inhibitory peptide prevented ICaL inactivation voltage shifts. The SR Ca2+-uptake inhibitor thapsigargin and the SR Ca2+ release inhibitor ryanodine also suppressed CAVB-induced EADs, consistent with an important role for SR Ca2+ loading and release in arrhythmogenesis. AP-duration changes reached a maximum after 1 week of bradypacing, but peak alterations in CaMKII and [Ca2+]i required 2 weeks, paralleling the EAD time course. Conclusions-CAVB-induced remodeling enhances [Ca2+]i load and activates the Ca 2+-calmodulin-CaMKII system, producing [Ca2+] i-handling abnormalities that contribute importantly to CAVB-induced arrhythmogenic afterdepolarizations. © 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.

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Qi, X. Y., Yeh, Y. H., Chartier, D., Xiao, L., Tsuji, Y., Brundel, B. J. J. M., … Nattel, S. (2009). The calcium/calmodulin/kinase system and arrhythmogenic afterdepolarizations in bradycardia-related acquired long-QT syndrome. Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology, 2(3), 295–304. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCEP.108.815654

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