Optogenetic currents in myofibroblasts acutely alter electrophysiology and conduction of co-cultured cardiomyocytes
2020
Interactions between cardiac myofibroblasts and myocytes may slow conduction after cardiac injury, increasing the chance of life-threatening arrhythmia. While co-culture studies have shown that myofibroblasts can affect cardiomyocyte electrophysiology in vitro, the mechanism(s) remain debatable. In this study, primary neonatal rat cardiac myofibroblasts were transduced with the light-activated ion channel Channelrhodopsin-2, which allowed acute and selective modulation of myofibroblast currents in co-cultures with cardiomyocytes. Optical mapping revealed that myofibroblast-specific optogenetically induced inward currents decreased conduction velocity in the co-cultures by 27+/-6% (baseline = 17.7+/-5.3 cm/s), and shortened the cardiac action potential duration by 14+/-7% (baseline = 161+/-11 ms) when 0.017 mW/mm^2 light was applied. When light irradiance was increased to 0.057 mW/mm^2, the myofibroblast currents led to spontaneous beating in 6/7 co-cultures. Experiments showed that optogenetic perturbation did not lead to changes in myofibroblast strain and force generation, suggesting purely electrical effects in this model. In silico modeling of optogenetically modified myofibroblast-cardiomyocyte co-cultures largely reproduced these results and enabled a comprehensive study of relevant parameters. These results clearly demonstrate that myofibroblasts are sufficiently electrically connected to cardiomyocytes to effectively alter macroscopic electrophysiological properties in this model of cardiac tissue.
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