1. Muscarinic agonists inhibit the ATP-dependent potassium current and suppress the ventricle-Purkinje action potential dispersion.
- Author
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Magyar T, Árpádffy-Lovas T, Pászti B, Tóth N, Szlovák J, Gazdag P, Kohajda Z, Gyökeres A, Györe B, Gurabi Z, Jost N, Virág L, Papp JG, Nagy N, and Koncz I
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Adenosine Triphosphate pharmacology, Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Carbachol pharmacology, KATP Channels metabolism, KATP Channels agonists, Papillary Muscles drug effects, Papillary Muscles physiology, Male, Pinacidil pharmacology, Action Potentials drug effects, Purkinje Fibers drug effects, Purkinje Fibers physiology, Acetylcholine pharmacology, Heart Ventricles drug effects, Muscarinic Agonists pharmacology
- Abstract
Activation of the parasympathetic nervous system has been reported to have an antiarrhythmic role during ischemia-reperfusion injury by decreasing the arrhythmia triggers. Furthermore, it was reported that the parasympathetic neurotransmitter acetylcholine is able to modulate the ATP-dependent potassium current ( I ), a crucial current activated during hypoxia. However, the possible significance of this current modulation in the antiarrhythmic mechanism is not fully clarified. Action potentials were measured using the conventional microelectrode technique from canine left ventricular papillary muscle and free-running Purkinje fibers, under normal and hypoxic conditions. Ionic currents were measured using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp method. Acetylcholine at 5 μmol/L did not influence the action potential duration (APD) either in Purkinje fibers or in papillary muscle preparations. In contrast, it significantly lengthened the APD and suppressed the Purkinje-ventricle APD dispersion when it was administered after 5 μmol/L pinacidil application. Carbachol at 3 μmol/L reduced the pinacidil-activated
K-ATP under voltage-clamp conditions. Acetylcholine lengthened the ventricular action potential under simulated ischemia condition. In this study, we found that acetylcholine inhibits the IK-ATP under voltage-clamp conditions. Acetylcholine lengthened the ventricular action potential under simulated ischemia condition. In this study, we found that acetylcholine inhibits the IK-ATP and thus suppresses the ventricle-Purkinje APD dispersion. We conclude that parasympathetic tone may reduce the arrhythmogenic substrate exerting a complex antiarrhythmic mechanism during hypoxic conditions.- Published
- 2021
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