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Publication : HCN4 pacemaker channels attenuate the parasympathetic response and stabilize the spontaneous firing of the sinoatrial node.

First Author  Kozasa Y Year  2018
Journal  J Physiol Volume  596
Issue  5 Pages  809-825
PubMed ID  29315578 Mgi Jnum  J:296681
Mgi Id  MGI:6471762 Doi  10.1113/JP275303
Citation  Kozasa Y, et al. (2018) HCN4 pacemaker channels attenuate the parasympathetic response and stabilize the spontaneous firing of the sinoatrial node. J Physiol 596(5):809-825
abstractText  The heart rate is dynamically controlled by the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems that regulate the sinoatrial node (SAN). HCN4 pacemaker channels are the well-known causative molecule of congenital sick sinus syndrome. Although HCN4 channels are activated by cAMP, the sympathetic response of the SAN was preserved in patients carrying loss-of-function mutations of the HCN4 gene. In order to clarify the contribution of HCN4 channels in the autonomic regulation of the SAN, we developed novel gain-of-function mutant mice in which the expression level of HCN4 channels could be reversibly changed from zero to ∌3 times that in wild-type mice, using tetracycline transactivator and the tetracycline responsive element. We recorded telemetric ECGs in freely moving conscious mice and analysed the heart rate variability. We also evaluated the response of the SAN to cervical vagus nerve stimulation (CVNS). The conditional overexpression of HCN4 did not induce tachycardia, but reduced heart rate variability. The HCN4 overexpression also attenuated bradycardia induced by the CVNS only during the β-adrenergic stimulation. In contrast, the knockdown of HCN4 gave rise to sinus arrhythmia, and enhanced the parasympathetic response; complete sinus pause was induced by the CVNS. In vitro, we compared the effects of acetylcholine on the spontaneous action potentials of single pacemaker cells, and found that similar phenotypic changes were induced by genetic manipulation of HCN4 expression both in the presence and absence of β-adrenergic stimulation. Our study suggests that HCN4 channels attenuate the vagal response of the SAN, and thereby stabilize the spontaneous firing of the SAN.
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