Expression and function of a biological pacemaker in canine heart

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Abstract

Background - We hypothesized that localized overexpression of the hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN2) pacemaker current isoform in canine left atrium (LA) would constitute a novel biological pacemaker. Methods and Results - Adenoviral constructs of mouse HCN2 and green fluorescent protein (GFP) or GFP alone were injected into LA, terminal studies performed 3 to 4 days later, hearts removed, and myocytes examined for native and expressed pacemaker current (If). Spontaneous LA rhythms occurred after vagal stimulation-induced sinus arrest in 4 of 4 HCN2+GFP dogs and 0 of 3 GFP dogs (P<0.05). Native If in nonexpressed atrial myocytes was 7±4 pA at -130 mV (n=5), whereas HCN2+GFP LA had expressed pacemaker current (IHCN2) of 3823±713 pA at - 125 mV (n=10) and 768±365 pA at -85 mV. Conclusions - HCN2 overexpression provides an If-based pacemaker sufficient to drive the heart when injected into a localized region of atrium, offering a promising gene therapy for pacemaker disease.

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APA

Qu, J., Plotnikov, A. N., Danilo, P., Shlapakova, I., Cohen, I. S., Robinson, R. B., & Rosen, M. R. (2003). Expression and function of a biological pacemaker in canine heart. Circulation, 107(8), 1106–1109. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000059939.97249.2C

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