Sex-specific repolarization heterogeneity in mouse left ventricle: Optical mapping combined with mathematical modeling predict the contribution of specific ionic currents.
S Erfan Moussavi-TorshiziEhsan AminNikolaj KlöckerPublished in: Physiological reports (2023)
Ventricular repolarization shows notable sex-specificity, with female sex being associated with longer QT-intervals in electrocardiography irrespective of the species studied. From a clinical point of view, women are at a greater risk for drug-induced torsade de pointes and symptomatic long-QT syndrome. Here, we present an optical mapping (OM) approach to reveal sex-specific action potential (AP) heterogeneity in a slice preparation of mouse hearts. Left ventricular epicardial repolarization in female versus male mice shows longer and, interindividually, more variable AP duration (APD), yielding a less prominent transmural APD gradient. By combining OM with mathematical modeling, we suggest a significant role of I Kto,f and I Kur in AP broadening in females. Other transmembrane currents, including I NaL , only marginally affect basal APD. As in many cardiac pathophysiologies, increasing [Ca 2+ ] i poses a risk for arrhythmia, the response of AP morphology to enhanced activation of L-type calcium channels (LTCC) was assessed in a sex-selective manner. Both APD and its variation increased significantly more in female versus male mice after pharmacological LTCC activation, which we hypothesize to be due to sex-specific I NaL expression based on mathematical modeling. Altogether, we demonstrate a more delayed repolarization of LV epicardium, a leveled LV transmural APD gradient, and a more pronounced epicardial APD response to Ca 2+ influx in females versus males. Mathematical modeling quantifies the relative contributions of selected ionic currents to sex-specific AP morphology under normal and pathophysiological conditions.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- left ventricular
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- single cell
- heart failure
- mitral valve
- ionic liquid
- poor prognosis
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- protein kinase
- high density
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- high speed
- climate change
- coronary artery disease
- solid state
- mass spectrometry
- atrial fibrillation
- gene expression
- left atrial
- molecularly imprinted
- adipose tissue