Department of Biomedical Engineering, George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Washington, DC, USA.
Department of Physics, George Washington University Columbian College of Art and Sciences, Washington, DC, USA.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol. 2020 Dec;6(14):1827-1840. doi: 10.1016/j.jacep.2020.09.012. Epub 2020 Nov 25.
This study sought to investigate the shift of leading pacemaker locations in healthy and failing mammalian hearts over the entire range of physiological heart rates (HRs), and to molecularly characterize spatial regions of spontaneous activity.
A normal heartbeat originates as an action potential in a group of pacemaker cells known as the sinoatrial node (SAN), located near the superior vena cava. HRs and the anatomical site of origin of pacemaker activity in the adult heart are known to dynamically change in response to various physiological inputs, yet the mechanism of this pacemaker shift is not well understood.
Optical mapping was applied to ex vivo rat and human isolated right atrial tissues, and HRs were modulated with acetylcholine and isoproterenol. RNA sequencing was performed on tissue areas that elicited spontaneous activity, and comparisons were made to neighboring myocardial tissues.
Functional and molecular evidence identified and confirmed the presence of 2 competing right atrial pacemakers localized near the superior vena cava and the inferior vena cava-the superior SAN (sSAN) and inferior SAN (iSAN), respectively-which preferentially control the fast and slow HRs. Both of these regions were evident in non-failing rat and human hearts and maintained spontaneous activity in the rat heart when physically separated from one another. Molecular analysis of these 2 pacemaker regions revealed unique but similar transcriptional profiles, suggesting iSAN dominance when the sSAN is silent.
The presence of 2 spatially distinct dominant pacemakers, sSAN and iSAN, in the mammalian heart clarifies previous identification of migrating pacemakers and corresponding changes in P-wave morphology in mammalian species.
本研究旨在探究在整个生理心率范围内健康和衰竭的哺乳动物心脏中主导起搏部位的转移,并对自发活动的空间区域进行分子特征分析。
正常心跳起源于一组被称为窦房结(SAN)的起搏细胞的动作电位,位于上腔静脉附近。已知成人心脏的心率和起搏活动的解剖起源部位会随着各种生理输入的变化而动态改变,但这种起搏转移的机制尚不清楚。
采用光学映射技术对离体大鼠和人右心房组织进行研究,并通过乙酰胆碱和异丙肾上腺素调节心率。对引发自发活动的组织区域进行 RNA 测序,并与邻近的心肌组织进行比较。
功能和分子证据证实并确认了 2 个竞争的右房起搏部位的存在,它们分别位于上腔静脉和下腔静脉附近,分别为上腔窦房结(sSAN)和下腔窦房结(iSAN),它们分别优先控制快速和慢速心率。这两个区域在非衰竭的大鼠和人心房中都存在,并在彼此物理分离时维持大鼠心脏的自发活动。对这 2 个起搏区域的分子分析显示出独特但相似的转录谱,提示当 sSAN 沉默时 iSAN 占主导地位。
哺乳动物心脏中存在 2 个空间上明显不同的主导起搏部位 sSAN 和 iSAN,阐明了以前在哺乳动物物种中发现的迁移起搏部位和相应的 P 波形态变化。