Department of Biomedical Engineering, Institute for Computational Medicine and Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St., Hackerman Hall Room 316, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Institute for Computational Medicine and Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St., Hackerman Hall Room 316, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Europace. 2014 Nov;16 Suppl 4(Suppl 4):iv69-iv76. doi: 10.1093/europace/euu250.
Diseases that abbreviate the cardiac action potential (AP) by increasing the strength of repolarizing transmembrane currents are highly arrhythmogenic. It has been proposed that optogenetic tools could be used to restore normal AP duration (APD) in the heart under such disease conditions. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of an optogenetic treatment modality for prolonging pathologically shortened APs in a detailed computational model of short QT syndrome (SQTS) in the human atria, and compare it to drug treatment.
We used a human atrial myocyte model with faster repolarization caused by SQTS; light sensitivity was inscribed via the presence of channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2). We conducted simulations in single cells and in a magnetic resonance imaging-based model of the human left atrium (LA). Application of an appropriate optical stimulus to a diseased cell dynamically increased APD, producing an excellent match to control AP (<1.5 mV deviation); treatment of a diseased cell with an AP-prolonging drug (chloroquine) also increased APD, but the match to control AP was worse (>5 mV deviation). Under idealized conditions in the LA (uniform ChR2-expressing cell distribution, no light attenuation), optogenetics-based therapy outperformed chloroquine treatment (APD increased to 87% and 81% of control). However, when non-uniform ChR2-expressing cell distribution and light attenuation were incorporated, optogenetics-based treatment was less effective (APD only increased to 55%).
This study demonstrates proof of concept for optogenetics-based treatment of diseases that alter atrial AP shape. We identified key practical obstacles intrinsic to the optogenetic approach that must be overcome before such treatments can be realized.
通过增加复极化跨膜电流的强度来缩短动作电位(AP)的疾病具有高度致心律失常性。有人提出,光遗传学工具可以用于在这种疾病条件下恢复心脏的正常 AP 持续时间(APD)。本研究旨在评估一种光遗传学治疗方法在人类心房短 QT 综合征(SQTS)的详细计算模型中对延长病理性缩短 AP 的疗效,并将其与药物治疗进行比较。
我们使用了一种具有更快复极化的人类心房肌细胞模型,该模型由 SQTS 引起;通过存在通道视紫红质-2(ChR2)来记录光敏感性。我们在单细胞和基于磁共振成像的人类左心房(LA)模型中进行了模拟。对患病细胞施加适当的光刺激会动态增加 APD,与对照 AP 非常匹配(<1.5 mV 偏差);用一种延长 AP 的药物(氯喹)治疗患病细胞也会增加 APD,但与对照 AP 的匹配较差(>5 mV 偏差)。在 LA 的理想条件下(均匀表达 ChR2 的细胞分布,无光衰减),基于光遗传学的治疗优于氯喹治疗(APD 增加到对照的 87%和 81%)。然而,当纳入非均匀 ChR2 表达细胞分布和光衰减时,基于光遗传学的治疗效果较差(APD 仅增加到对照的 55%)。
本研究证明了基于光遗传学的治疗改变心房 AP 形状的疾病的概念验证。我们确定了基于光遗传学方法固有的关键实际障碍,在这些治疗方法能够实现之前必须克服这些障碍。