Skip to main content
Advertisement
  • Loading metrics

In silico study of multicellular automaticity of heterogeneous cardiac cell monolayers: Effects of automaticity strength and structural linear anisotropy

  • James Elber Duverger,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Software, Validation, Visualization, Writing – original draft

    Affiliations Research Centre, Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Department of Pharmacology and Physiology / Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

  • Vincent Jacquemet,

    Roles Conceptualization, Methodology, Software, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliations Department of Pharmacology and Physiology / Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Research Centre, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

  • Alain Vinet,

    Roles Conceptualization, Methodology, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliations Department of Pharmacology and Physiology / Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Research Centre, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

  • Philippe Comtois

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    philippe.comtois@umontreal.ca

    Affiliations Research Centre, Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Department of Pharmacology and Physiology / Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

The biological pacemaker approach is an alternative to cardiac electronic pacemakers. Its main objective is to create pacemaking activity from added or modified distribution of spontaneous cells in the myocardium. This paper aims to assess how automaticity strength of pacemaker cells (i.e. their ability to maintain robust spontaneous activity with fast rate and to drive neighboring quiescent cells) and structural linear anisotropy, combined with density and spatial distribution of pacemaker cells, may affect the macroscopic behavior of the biological pacemaker. A stochastic algorithm was used to randomly distribute pacemaker cells, with various densities and spatial distributions, in a semi-continuous mathematical model. Simulations of the model showed that stronger automaticity allows onset of spontaneous activity for lower densities and more homogeneous spatial distributions, displayed more central foci, less variability in cycle lengths and synchronization of electrical activation for similar spatial patterns, but more variability in those same variables for dissimilar spatial patterns. Compared to their isotropic counterparts, in silico anisotropic monolayers had less central foci and displayed more variability in cycle lengths and synchronization of electrical activation for both similar and dissimilar spatial patterns. The present study established a link between microscopic structure and macroscopic behavior of the biological pacemaker, and may provide crucial information for optimized biological pacemaker therapies.

Author summary

Implantation of electronic pacemakers is a standard treatment to pathologically slow heart rhythm. Despite improving quality of life, those devices display many shortcomings. Bioengineered tissue pacemakers may be a therapeutic alternative, but associated design methods usually lack control of the way cells with spontaneous activity are scattered throughout the tissue. Our study is the first to use a mathematical model to rigorously define and thoroughly characterize how pacemaker cells scattering at the microscopic level may affect macroscopic behaviors of the bioengineered tissue pacemaker. Automaticity strength (ability of pacemaker cell to drive its non-pacemaker neighbors) and anisotropy (preferential orientation of cell shape) are also implemented and give unparalleled insights on how effects of uncontrollable scattered pacemaker cells may be modulated by available experimental techniques. Our model is a powerful tool to aid in optimized bioengineered pacemaker therapies.

Introduction

Oscillating, autonomous or spontaneous electrical activity is the basis of normal heart physiology [1], as well as some impaired rhythms triggered by ectopic activity [2]. Two oscillating mechanisms or clocks, the membrane and calcium clocks, are hypothesized to control the sinoatrial node (SAN) isolated cellular rate [35]. Membrane clock refers to the synergy of transmembrane ionic currents [6,7], and calcium clock to the oscillations of intracellular calcium concentration [8]. Developmental variations may change magnitudes of the respective clock components [9]. Interplay between these two strongly coupled mechanisms may be responsible for spontaneous activity and temporal fluctuation in heart rate [10]. At the cellular level, the clocks basically create an ionic imbalance during the diastolic period, leading to a net inward flux of ionic current that slowly increases membrane potential until the threshold (~ −40 mV) to fire an action potential is reached. Inducing this net inward flux of ionic current during the diastole can actually generate automaticity in otherwise quiescent cardiomyocytes (CMs). This principle has been exploited in the design of biological pacemakers (BPs), a therapeutic alternative to overcome the shortcomings of cardiac electronic pacemakers [11] in the treatment of bradycardia. Different procedures have been proposed, including injection-based gene [12] and cell therapy [13], that locally modify cardiomyocyte phenotype or bring differentiated cells in the myocardium.

These concepts are limited by the lack of control on the spatial distribution and phenotype of pacemaker (PM) cells within the resting but excitable cellular network of the myocardium. We have shown that density and spatial distribution of PM cells can alter significantly the emergence and characteristics of multicellular spontaneous activity [14]. In fact, density and spatial distribution of PM cells, a priori unknown in BPs, may lead to a non-negligible intrinsic variability in the spontaneous activity of the overall network. Intrinsic variability is defined as behavioral discrepancies among BP samples that had undergone the exact same protocol. This phenomenon could eventually compromise the success of BP implantation in patients, and is observed even in in vitro BP models like monolayer cultures of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs), which are also heterogeneous network of autonomous and quiescent cardiomyocytes [15].

In the present simulation study, besides density and spatial distribution of PM cells, we introduce two additional variables: (a) automaticity strength and (b) anisotropy. Automaticity strength is defined as the ability of a pacemaker cell to maintain robust spontaneous activity with fast rate and to drive neighboring quiescent cells. It is strongly related to the amplitude of the net inward ionic current into the PM cell during the late diastolic period and the rising phase of the action potential (AP). For example, adding fetal bovine serum to monolayer cultures of NRVMs “strengthens” automaticity, i.e. favors higher firing rate, by upregulating inward long-lasting activation calcium current ICaL [16]. Early versions of engineered BPs have been created from quiescent monolayer cultures or quiescent in vivo CMs via the use of different techniques to upregulate inward pacemaking current If [17]. The second newly introduced variable, anisotropy, can be created in cultures of NRVMs via several methods, notably by patterning the culture substrate [18,19] or directly seeding the cell into a thin slice of decellularized cardiac tissue [20]. These methods usually lead to functional cardiac network with elongated cell and faster propagation in the longitudinal direction [20]. It has been proposed that linear anisotropy could facilitate BP function [21]. However, the underlying mechanism remains unclear since most studies do not assess specific effects of anisotropy on spontaneous activity but instead focus on contractile function [20], electrical activation [22], or orientation-related response to stretch [23].

This study aims to assess modulation effects of automaticity strength and anisotropy on the spontaneous activity of cardiac monolayers with various densities and spatial distributions. The non-linear relationship between those two variables and automaticity will be characterized with simulation methods and discussed in details.

Methods

Cardiac network model

Semi-discrete microstructure models are more suitable than continuous models when individual cell sizes, shapes and orientations are variables under investigation [24,25]. For this reason, a previously described semi-discrete microstructure model [26] was used to simulate two 2D network geometries corresponding to isotropic and anisotropic monolayers. The two network geometries were identical in all aspects, except: (a) aspect ratio of cells (AR, length divided by width of the cell), and (b) distribution of gap junctions. As summarized in Table 1, a grid of 920 x 920 nodes was created with 6 μm resolution, and assigned to 42,642 CMs to create a 5.5 mm x 5.5 mm monolayer.

thumbnail
Table 1. Characterization of the monolayers: isotropic vs. anisotropic.

Isotropic and anisotropic monolayers are identical for most of the features. The cells differ only in aspect ratio and intercellular conductivities.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.t001

Each cell included ~20 nodes. CMs for anisotropic geometry had an average AR of 3 compared to 1 for isotropic geometry. Longitudinal and transverse intercellular conductivities were adjusted to fit experimental conduction velocities found in NRVMs monolayer cultures [18]. The experimental isotropic conduction velocity was reported to be 16.8 ± 2.1 cm/s in all directions; and for anisotropic monolayer cultures, the longitudinal and transverse conduction velocities were 20.8 ± 3.2 cm/s and 10.9 ± 2.9 cm/s respectively. Intercellular coupling was set to 0.04 nS per 6 μm border length for CMs in isotropic network, and 0.062 nS and 0.034 nS per 6 μm border length respectively along longitudinal and transverse borders of CMs in anisotropic network.

The Luo-Rudy Phase 1 (LR1) mathematical model of ventricular cell [27] was used to represent the CMs, with the application of a constant inward bias current (Ibias) to generate spontaneous activity [28,29]. The LR1 model is simulated at every node of each cell, and examples of APs and total ionic currents obtained in a single cell with Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 and Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2 are illustrated in Fig 1A and 1B respectively.

thumbnail
Fig 1. Cardiac monolayer model.

(a) Example of spontaneous APs obtained for Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 and Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2. (b) Total ionic currents corresponding to AP traces in panel a. (c) Stable and unstable fixed points (black and red line respectively), with subcritical Hopf bifurcations H1 and H2 (magenta squares, Ibias = 2.554 and 4.470 μA/cm2). Maximum and minimum membrane potential V values of the stable and unstable cycles (blue and green lines respectively). The stable cycles exists between the two cycle saddle nodes bifurcation SNC1 and SNC2 (Ibias = 2.553 and 4.691 μA/cm2). (d) Autonomous cycle lengths as a function of Ibias (stable cycles only). Dashed lines display cycle length for Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 and Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2, corresponding to AP traces in panel a.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g001

This cell model was chosen because its bifurcation structure related to oscillatory behavior has been fully characterized. Indeed, bifurcation analysis undertaken with AUTO continuation software [30] is displayed in Fig 1C. The S-shape curve of fixed points has a lower and upper branch connected by an intermediate branch of unstable fixed points. Both the lower and upper branches change stability through subcritical Hopf Bifurcations (H1 and H2, magenta square). Stable cycle exist in between the two Cycle Saddle nodes bifurcation (blue lines from SNC1 and SNC2). At high Ibias, the branch of unstable cycles created at SNC2 (green line) connect the Hopf bifurcation H2. The branch of unstable cycles created at SNC2 exist only on a small interval of Ibias and ends through a Homoclinic bifurcation with the intermediate branch of fixed point. Similarly, the branch of unstable cycles created at H1 exist on a tiny interval of Ibias and also disappears through a Homoclinic bifurcation with the intermediate branch of fixed point. The cycle length of stable spontaneous activity decreased with Ibias and ranged from 1989 ms to 516 ms (Fig 1D).

Stochastic distribution of pacemaker cells

The 2D cardiac network was assumed to contain two populations of cells: PM (Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 or Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2) and quiescent (Ibias = 0 μA/cm2) excitable cells. The density of pacemaker cells (Daut ∈ [0,1]) was defined as the percentage of PM cells within the network. The spatial distribution was dependent on a variable (pthr ∈ [0,1]) determining how homogeneous PM cells were spread in the network. Fig 2 provides intuitive disambiguation between density and spatial distribution. Density described the total number of PM cells in the network, regardless of their scattering within the network.

thumbnail
Fig 2. Disambiguation: density vs. spatial distribution.

(a) Density of 4% with inhomogeneous distribution. (b) Density of 16% with inhomogeneous distribution. (c) Density of 16% with homogeneous distribution.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g002

Spatial distribution described the scattering of PM cells, and hence completed the spatial information from the overall density. Both variables were required to fully specify a spatial pattern. Two networks might have the same density of PM cells but different spatial distributions, or conversely they might share similar spatial distribution of PM cells but had different densities. Higher values of Daut and pthr correlate with higher percentage and more homogeneous spatial distribution of PM cells respectively. A previously described stochastic algorithm [14] was modified and implemented to randomly attribute positions to PM cells in the isotropic and anisotropic networks. Aggregation occurred when a PM cell was placed in the immediate neighborhood of another PM cell. Otherwise nucleation was said to occur, i.e. the PM cell occupied a position where only quiescent CMs were in its immediate neighborhood. Any random process of the algorithm followed continuous uniform probability distribution. For each pair (Daut, pthr), the algorithm worked as stated below and as illustrated in Fig 3:

thumbnail
Fig 3. Stochastic algorithm governing density and spatial distribution of pacemaker cells: An illustration.

(a) Blank geometry where all cells are quiescent. (b) Random attribution of the 1st pacemaker cell. (c) Determination of M1 available sites for aggregation and M2 available sites for nucleation in red and blue respectively. (d) Random nucleation of the 2nd pacemaker cell in M2 eventually because ppthr. (e) Determination of M1 and M2. (f) Random aggregation of the 3rd pacemaker cell in M1 eventually because p > pthr.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g003

  1. Step 1: randomly place the 1st PM cell in the network (equal probability for each cell of the network);
  2. Step 2: determine M1 (aggregation available sites) and M2 (nucleation available sites);
  3. Step 3: randomly generate decision number p ∈ [0,1];
  4. Step 4: perform aggregation in M1 (if p > pthr) or nucleation in M2 (if ppthr);
  5. Step 5: perform aggregation in M1 (if M2 is empty);
  6. Step 6: repeat steps 2 to 5 until the required Daut is reached.

Default Ibias value for all cells was 0, i.e. all cells are quiescent unless set otherwise. Placing a PM cell consisted in setting Ibias for all nodes of a cell to a single non-zero value inside the interval [2.6–4.7] μA/cm2. The same procedure was used to distribute spontaneous cells in the isotropic and anisotropic cell layouts.

In Fig 4 are presented the first 50 x 50 nodes of two geometries. Cells in network with isotropic geometry demonstrated no preferential orientation compared to cells in network with anisotropic geometry which are clearly oriented along the longitudinal axis.

thumbnail
Fig 4. Network geometry: Isotropic vs. anisotropic.

Illustration of the 50 x 50 first nodes of 2 monolayers, with pacemaker cells in black and quiescent cells in white. (a) Isotropic monolayer where cells display no preferential orientation. (b) Anisotropic monolayer where cells display preferential orientation along the longitudinal/horizontal axis.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g004

Within the cardiac 2D network, a PM cluster was a subgroup of interconnected PM cells. Two PM cells were considered interconnected if they shared gap junctions. The size of a PM cluster was the number of PM cells in that cluster, and the maximum PM cluster size Scluster was the size of the network’s biggest PM cluster. Porosity was the fraction of quiescent cells in a PM cluster. In fact, any subgroup of interconnected PM cells was a PM cluster, but quiescent cells might also be enclosed within the cluster, i.e. totally surrounded by the cluster’s PM cells. Given , the average of maximum PM cluster size including both PM and quiescent cells, porosity was defined as follows: where

Porosity: average fraction of quiescent cells in the largest PM cluster

: average of maximum PM cluster size, counting only PM cells

: average of maximum PM cluster size, counting both PM and quiescent cells

Simulation protocols and data analysis

As previously described [26], a 2D monodomain approximation with fine discretization was used to formulate the microstructure model. No-flux boundary conditions were applied to the four sides of the network. Initial conditions for all cells corresponded to the resting state of quiescent cells. The total simulation duration was 10 s, and the steady-state behaviors were reached rapidly within two to three autonomous period for most spontaneous cases, the longest transient behaviors found at the transition between non-autonomous to autonomous multicellular activity. Analysis was done on simulations after removing the first action potential thus including the time from the 2nd action potential up until 10 s. Simulations were performed to study the effect of Daut and pthr on the spontaneous activity of 4 groups:

  1. * ISO-2.6 –networks with isotropic geometry and weak automaticity (Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 for all PM cells)
  2. * ISO-3.5 –networks with isotropic geometry and strong automaticity (Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2 for all PM cells)
  3. * ANISO-2.6 –networks with anisotropic geometry and weak automaticity (Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 for all PM cells)
  4. * ANISO-3.5 –networks with anisotropic geometry and strong automaticity (Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2 for all PM cells)

400 pairs (Daut, pthr) were drawn from 20 values of Daut ∈ {0.05, 0.1, …, 0.95} and 20 values of scaled ∈ {0.05, 0.1, …, 1}. We used non-regular spacing for pthr due to its nonlinear effect on cell distribution. Eight random realizations of the networks were generated for each pair (Daut,pthr) and for each group, generating 4 groups x 8 networks x 400 (Daut,pthr) = 12,800 simulations, as detailed below:

  1. * ISO-2.6: 8 isotropic networks with weak automaticity × 400 (Daut,pthr) = 3,200 simulations
  2. * ISO-3.5: 8 isotropic network with strong automaticity × 400 (Daut,pthr) = 3,200 simulations
  3. * ANISO-2.6: 8 anisotropic network with weak automaticity × 400 (Daut,pthr) = 3,200 simulations
  4. * ANISO-3.5: 8 anisotropic network with strong automaticity × 400 (Daut,pthr) = 3,200 simulations

Post-simulation analysis was performed in Matlab (The Mathworks, Natick, MA). The network was said to have spontaneous activity if two complete activations or more were detected during 10 s of simulation. Conversely, the simulation was labeled as non-automatic if a single AP or no activation was detected. The activation time of an action potential (AP) was defined as the time when the transmembrane voltage depolarizes beyond -40 mV. For the ith AP of a given simulation, the activation map (Mtact,i in ms) was a matrix constructed from detected activation times for all nodes.

A first set of measures was computed for each 10 s simulation with spontaneous activity.

  1. * Normalized activation map (Mntact,i in ms) for the ith AP was obtained as follows:
(1)
  1. * Spontaneous cycle length map (ΔMtact,i in ms) for the ith AP was defined as:
(2)

The spontaneous cycle length value (Δtact,i in ms) for that map was: (3)

And the average spontaneous cycle length Δtact,i in ms) for the series of N APs was: (4)

  1. * The map of synchronization times (Mτsync,i in s/cm) for the ith AP was the inverse of conduction velocities, calculated from the spatial gradient of Mtact,i using a previously described method [31]. It quantified activation delays between cells. If all cells were synchronized, meaning they activated at the same time, Mτsync,i would be zero for each position on the lattice. The average synchronization time for N APs was:
(5)

A second set of measures were defined for each pair (Daut,pthr) to assess how spontaneous activity behaves for similar spatial patterns and hence the variability between realizations of the same random process of pattern generation. In fact, as previously stated, eight monolayers have been produced for every pairs (Daut,pthr). The monolayers produced with the same (Daut,pthr) had similar spatial patterns, compared to monolayers produced with different (Daut,pthr) which had dissimilar spatial patterns.

  1. * For each pair (Daut,pthr), given n simulations (up to 8) with spontaneous activity, average and standard deviation of spontaneous cycle length for similar spatial patterns were defined as:
(6)(7)

: average cycle length over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr)

σΔTact: standard deviation of cycle length over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr)

: cycle length for the jth simulation, as stated in Eq (4)

  1. * For each pair (Daut,pthr), average and standard deviation of synchronization time for similar spatial patterns were defined as:
(8)(9)

: average synchronization time over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr)

σTsync: standard deviation of synchronization time over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr)

τsync,j: synchronization time for the jth simulation, as stated in Eq (5)

The same process is used to calculate , , longitudinal and transverse components of Tsync.

The third set of measures were defined for dissimilar spatial patterns, i.e. monolayers with different values of (Daut,pthr).

  1. * The cycle length range for dissimilar patterns was defined as the percentage variation between the minimum and maximum values of over all pairs of (Daut,pthr):
(10)

: average cycle length over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr), as stated in Eq (6)

  1. * The synchronization time range for dissimilar patterns was defined as the percentage variation between the minimum and maximum values of over all pairs of (Daut,pthr):
(11)

: average synchronization time over n simulations for a pair (Daut, pthr), as stated in Eq (8)

Furthermore, each monolayer was divided in two areas separated by a square of 2.75 mm side (half of the side of the monolayer) to distinguish between border and central foci (first initiation site of AP). Border foci behavior was assessed by anisotropy ratio. The border foci anisotropy ratio (r) was defined as: (12)

ηL: number of border foci in longitudinal x-direction (anisotropy direction)

ηT: number of border foci in transverse y-direction

Results

Characterization of the cardiac 2D network

, average of Scluster over 8 monolayers for each pair (Daut,pthr), increased with Daut, independently of , with a transition from below 10,000 PM cells to over 30,000 PM cells around Daut = 0.5 (Fig 5A and 5D).

thumbnail
Fig 5. Characterization of the stochastic algorithm governing density and spatial distribution of pacemaker cells.

(a,d) Average of maximum cluster size Scluster in color scale map as a function of Daut and , for monolayers with isotropic and anisotropic geometries. The size of a cluster is the actual number of pacemaker cells in that cluster. (b,e) Standard deviation of Scluster vs. Daut and . (c,f) Log10 of number of clusters Ncluster vs. Daut and . Solid white line is Daut,max (see definition in text) as a function of .

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g005

The extent of the transition phase, i.e. the number of pairs (Daut,pthr) with between 10,000 and 30,000 PM cells, correlated with increased standard deviation of (Std.Scluster). In fact, Std.Scluster (Fig 5B and 5E) was below 1,000 PM cells for all pairs (Daut,pthr) except for the transition phase where Std.Scluster > 2,000 PM cells. As shown in Fig 5C and 5F, the number of clusters (Nclusters) increased with Daut as long as Daut ≤ Daut,max (white solid line), and then decreased for Daut > Daut,max. For each , Daut,max was the maximum Daut beyond which M2 became empty, i.e. there was no more available site to perform cluster nucleation during the creation of the spatial distribution of PM cells. Thus, once Daut,max has been reached, only aggregation was possible for increasing Daut. In Fig 6, a relationship was established between the transition in Scluster and Daut,max.

thumbnail
Fig 6. Relationship between cluster size transition and cluster fusion.

(a) (average of maximum cluster size) in color scale map as a function a function of Daut and , for anisotropic networks. Solid white line is Daut,max as a function of . (b) as a function of Daut, for first and last . (c) (first derivative of ) as a function of Daut, for first and last . (d) Maximum of vs. Daut and for all , plotted as a function Daut,max.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g006

The maximum of the derivative of as a function of Daut, i.e. max[] = max[ΔScluster/ΔDaut], representing the sharpness of the transition of Scluster from below 10,000 PM cells to over 30,000 PM cells, was calculated for all and plotted against Daut,max. The sharpness of the transition was inversely proportional to Daut,max (Fig 6D). Differences between isotropic and anisotropic geometries were unsurprisingly negligible for , Nclusters, and Daut,max, since the number of neighbors was approximately the same for both geometries. As such, spatial distribution of spontaneous cells created by our aggregation and nucleation process are not affected by cell preferential orientation.

Occurrence of spontaneous activity

In general, 2D cardiac networks with isotropic geometry demonstrated circular-shaped electrical activation, as illustrated in Fig 7B for the pattern shown in panel a. Networks with the anisotropic geometry typically had ellipse-shape electrical activation (Fig 7D for the pattern in panel c).

thumbnail
Fig 7. Electrical activation: isotropic vs. anisotropic.

(a) Isotropic monolayer with Daut = 0.3 and = 0.10 (black sites: PM cells). (b) Electrical activation times (ms) color scale map as a function of node positions for the previously described isotropic monolayer. (c) Anisotropic monolayer with Daut = 0.3 and = 0.15. (d) Electrical activation times (ms) for the anisotropic monolayer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g007

For a specific pair (Daut, pthr), given n the number of simulations with automaticity: (a) [n = 8] meant automaticity occurred for all 8 simulations, (b) [0<n<8] for 1 to 7 simulations, and (c) [n = 0] for no simulation with automaticity. As shown in Fig 8, autonomous activity occurs more often in ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5 compared to ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6 over all pairs (Daut, pthr).

thumbnail
Fig 8. Occurrence of automaticity.

(a-d) For each group, number n of simulations with automaticity is displayed in color scale map as a function Daut and . White spots correspond to [n = 0]. Proportions of pairs (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and [0<n<8] are also indicated.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g008

For example, 51.5% of pairs (Daut,pthr) demonstrated [n = 8] in ISO-3.5 versus 13.3% in ISO-2.6. Interestingly, proportions of pairs (Daut,pthr) with [0<n<8] were very similar for all four groups (~9%). Automaticity was thus more likely to be observed for higher values of Daut and lower values of , and no difference in occurrence of autonomous activity was found between isotropic and anisotropic geometries.

A transition curve from [n = 0] to [0<n<8] was the line drawn by the minimum Daut required for each to transition from [n = 0] to [0<n<8]. Similarly, the transition curve from [0<n<8] to [n = 8] was the line drawn by the minimum Daut required for each to transition from [0<n<8] to [n = 8]. In Fig 9A–9D, transition curves from [n = 0] to [0<n<8] (solid line) and from [0<n<8] to [n = 8] (dashed line) were superimposed to the color scale map of Scluster and porosity, for isotropic and anisotropic networks.

thumbnail
Fig 9. Transition curves.

(a-d) Transition curves from [n = 0] to [0<n<8] (solid line) and from [0<n<8] to [n = 8] (dashed line) are displayed in magenta for ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6, and in white for ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5. In background is color scale map of either or porosity, both against Daut and . (e,f) For each group, transition curve to [0<n<8] is subtracted to transition curve to [n = 8].

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g009

combined with porosity offered crucial insights on the morphology of the transition curves. Typically, automaticity did not appear when was below 5,000 PM cells and when porosity was over 0.35. The higher was, the greater Scluster had to be to generate automaticity. In all groups, larger was required to reach [n = 8] versus [0<n<8]. Networks with strong automaticity displayed spontaneous activity at smaller values of and higher porosity.

For all 4 groups, transition curves to [0<n<8] were subtracted from transition curves to [n = 8], and the differences were displayed in Fig 9E and 9F. Peak differences were higher for ISO-2.6 (0.50) and ANISO-2.6 (0.45) compared to ISO-3.5 (0.35) and ANISO-3.5 (0.40) respectively. Furthermore peak differences occurred for lower for ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6 (~0.2) compared to ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5 (~0.40).

Rate of spontaneous activity

In Fig 10A–10D, was calculated for each pair (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and displayed as color scale map vs. Daut and .

thumbnail
Fig 10. Rate of spontaneous activity.

(a-d) For all groups, average cycle length is calculated for each pair (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and displayed as a color scale map. The corresponding percentage range between the minimum and the maximum values of the map is also displayed. (e) For each group, mean and s.e.m of values in map are calculated. (f) For each group, mean and s.e.m of values in Std cycle length σΔTact map (obtained following the same process than ) are calculated.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g010

Independently of groups and for any given , decreased with increasing Daut. And ranges, i.e. intrinsic variability for dissimilar patterns, of for ISO-2.6 (16.19%) and ANISO-2.6 (14.56%) were much smaller than ISO-3.5 (98.86%) and ANISO-3.5 (100.96%).

In Fig 10E is presented mean[], calculated as the average over all pairs (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] shown in Fig 10A–10D. Detailed values can be found in Table 2.

Mean[] for ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6 were respectively 110.26% and 110.96% higher compared to those of ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5. This behavior was not surprising, considering the difference observed in single cell simulations (1428 ms for Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2 compared to 599 ms for Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2, in Fig 1D). Besides, it is important to notice that, for a given Ibias value, single pacemaker cells always display lower cycle length than monolayers. No difference in mean[] was found between isotropic and anisotropic geometries for [n = 8], but focusing on the set with [0<n<8] yielded interesting results. Pooling together all pairs (Daut, pthr) satisfying the condition [0<n<8] (Table 2), there was a higher mean[] ANISO-2.6 versus ISO-2.6 (3.08%), and ANISO-3.5 versus ISO-3.5 (5.50%).

Similarly to , σΔTact was calculated for each pair (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8]. Mean[σΔTact], the average value of σΔTact over all pairs (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] is also shown in Fig 10F and Table 2 for all groups. Mean[σΔTact] was a measure of intrinsic variability between monolayers with similar spatial patterns of PM cells. Mean[σΔTact] for ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6 were respectively 78.52% and 116.68% higher compared ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5. A difference between isotropic and anisotropic geometries was found where mean[σΔTact] in ANISO-2.6 was 30% higher vs. ISO-2.6, while a more limited increase of 8% was found for ANISO-3.5 compared to ISO-3.5.

Spatial characteristics of spontaneous activity

Difference in spatial characteristics of spontaneous activity between isotropic and anisotropic geometry was evaluated. The position of foci (i.e. first initiation sites of electrical activation) was estimated to determine if differences existed between the two network geometries. Independently of geometry, focal activation was highly stable in time for a given spatial pattern of spontaneous cells, demonstrating no beat-to-beat variability. For direct comparison between geometries, the focal position of the last simulated spontaneous beat was selected for all simulations with automaticity (i.e. [n>0]). Pooled positions were plotted in Fig 11A–11D.

thumbnail
Fig 11. Foci positions: Central vs. border.

(a-d) For each group, and for [n>0], focal position of the last activation is plotted. Central foci are inside the red square, whose side is 50% of the monolayer side. The border foci in the longitudinal x-direction are the foci located outside the red box, exclusively to the left and to the right. The border foci in the transverse y-direction are exclusively at the top and the bottom. Non-exclusive border foci at the corners, i.e. foci that are common to longitudinal and transverse direction are in the blue areas and are not considered in the calculation of border foci anisotropy ratio (r) in Eq (12). (e,f) Proportions of central focals for [n = 8] and [0<n<8].

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g011

The proportion of central foci over all foci is shown in Fig 11E and 11F and Table 2 for pairs of (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and pairs (Daut,pthr) with [0<n<8]. Anisotropic geometries demonstrated fewer central foci, independently of Ibias or n values. For pairs (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8], proportions of central foci decreased by 69.11% from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6, and by 40.84% from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5. The drop was less important for pairs of (Daut,pthr) with [0<n<8] case, where proportions of central foci fell by 45.35% from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6, and by 22.05% from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5. It was also interesting to observe that cases with [0<n<8] demonstrated fewer central foci than cases with [n = 8], independently of Ibias value or geometry. In fact, in ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6, proportions of central foci respectively fell by 83% and 69.9% from [n = 8] to [0<n<8]. The difference between pairs of (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and [0<n<8] was less important when Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2. As a matter of fact, the drop of central foci proportions from [n = 8] to [0<n<8] was 25.58% in ISO-3.5 and 1.94% in ANISO-3.5.

The border foci in the longitudinal x-direction were the foci located outside the red box, exclusively to the left and to the right. The border foci in the transverse y-direction were the foci located outside the red box, exclusively at the top and the bottom. Non-exclusive border foci at the corners, i.e. foci that are common to longitudinal and transverse directions (blue areas in Fig 11A–11D), were not considered in the calculations. Ratio with values greater than one suggested that there were more border foci in the longitudinal direction compared to the transverse direction. Values of r were calculated for [n = 8] and [0<n<8] and are presented in Table 2. Interestingly, r in anisotropic geometry are consistently greater than one and always higher compared to the value obtained in isotropic geometry. In fact, for [n = 8] case, r raised by 27% from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6, and by 204% from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5. For [0<n<8], r raised by 297% from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6, and by 119% from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5. No clear preference in border foci position was found for the isotropic network.

Synchronization of electrical activation is an important marker of spontaneously beating multicellular monolayer, either in silico or in vitro. was displayed as color map vs. Daut and for each pair (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] in Fig 12A–12D.

thumbnail
Fig 12. Synchronization times.

(a-d) For all groups, average synchronization time is calculated for each pair (Daut,pthr) with [n = 8] and displayed as a color scale map. The corresponding percentage range between the minimum and the maximum values of the map is also displayed.(e) For each group, mean and s.e.m of values in , , map are calculated. (f) For each group, mean and s.e.m of values in Std synchronization time σTSync map (obtained following the same process than ) are calculated.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.g012

No particular tendencies were observed in map for ISO-2.6 and ANISO-2.6. For ISO-3.5 and ANISO-3.5, and for Daut ≥ 0.8, increased and then decreased as a function of . Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2 led to much higher ranges compared to Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2. Indeed, range[] for ISO-2.6 (6.5%) and ANISO-2.6 (16.9%) were much smaller than ISO-3.5 (414%) and ANISO-3.5 (485%). Moreover, the increase in ranges could be noticed in anisotropic geometries versus isotropic geometries: 160% increase from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6 and more moderate 17.15% increase from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5.

Anisotropy consistently yielded higher synchronization times. Mean[] rose by 31.87% from ISO-2.6 to ANISO-2.6 and by 26.64% from ISO-3.5 to ANISO-3.5. Mean[] obviously played an important role in that increase. In fact, the unsurprising decrease of synchronization times in the direction of anisotropy mean[] was associated with a dramatic increase of mean[], leading to a higher resultant mean[].

Discussion

To our knowledge, this paper presents the first in silico study in a microstructure model describing how automaticity strength and structural linear anisotropy may modulate the effects of density and spatial distribution of PM cells on the spontaneous activity of the BP.

Our previous study [14] demonstrated that not only the density but also the spatial distribution of PM cells may induce important intrinsic variability in the BP dynamical behavior. The study focused on a simple continuous and isotropic 2D substrate with a single period of activity for the autonomous cells. These results quickly raised a very important question: can this intrinsic variability be limited despite the lack of control on density and spatial distribution of autonomous cells? Two straightforward solutions may be considered: (a) either the BP is tested ex vivo and then implanted into the myocardium, or (b) the current methods are combined with new processes intended to minimize the intrinsic variability. Investigating the second candidate solution is the main motivation behind the mathematical modeling optimization process that is underway. Here, we studied how different automaticity strengths and structural linear anisotropy can influence the spatial-temporal activity of the BP.

The main new contributions are described as follows:

  1. Spatial patterns of PM cells were mathematically defined and characterized within a semi-discrete 2D model, describing both automaticity strength and structural linear anisotropy.
  2. Automaticity strength enhanced occurrence of spontaneous activity, decreased variability in cycle length and synchronization time for similar spatial patterns of PM cells, but increased the number of central foci, and the variability of and for dissimilar spatial patterns PM cells.
  3. Structural linear anisotropy had no important effect on occurrence of spontaneous activity, increased variability in and for both similar and dissimilar spatial patterns of PM cells, and decreased the proportion of central foci.
  4. Intrinsic variability was modulated but not eliminated by neither automaticity strength nor structural linear anisotropy, since there was still a proportion of pairs (Daut,pthr) with no spontaneous activity and important performance discrepancies notably for dissimilar spatial patterns of PM cells.

PM cells were randomly placed in a semi-discrete 2D microstructure via a stochastic algorithm with a parameter Daut controlling density and a parameter determining homogeneity of spatial distribution. Two levels of automaticity strength (weak and strong) were achieved by two different values of Ibias (2.6 μA/cm2 and 3.5 μA/cm2). Linear anisotropy was structurally created by: (1) geometrically increasing aspect ratio of cells from one to three, and (2) fitting longitudinal and transverse gap junction distribution to published conduction velocities from anisotropic monolayer cultures of NRVMs [18].

Isolated PM cell dynamics were described by LR1 cardiac ventricle myocyte model [27], with a constant inward bias current to generate automaticity, as described elsewhere [28,29]. More complex ionic models (for example the published NRVM ionic model [32] or a mathematical models representing stem cell-derived human cardiomyocytes [33]) were not used: (1) to avoid important computational cost because of the associated long transient dynamics and (2) because increasing dimensions of mathematical ionic models does not necessarily lead to more predictive power. As a matter of fact, in many high dimension models very different set of parameters can lead to the same AP; in this case the model is said to have identifiability issue, a major flaw to predictive reliability [34]. The LR1 model obviously does not include the detailed ionic currents of cardiomyocytes (pacemaking and resting) nor can it reproduce the intricate interaction between the membrane/voltage clocks [6,28]. However it remains an appropriate trade-off option since it is identifiable [34] and can reproduce the basic physiological behaviors considered in the present study, namely automaticity and AP propagation.

To avoid confounding effects, some simplifications were made:

  1. We considered only two populations of cells: PM and quiescent excitable cells. Other types of heterogeneities such as sinks (spots with voltage fixed at resting potential like fibroblasts) and breaks (spots with no conduction, like monolayer damage) were not considered although they may have had an effect on conduction [35].
  2. Ibias was the same for all PM cells of a specific monolayers, i.e. all PM cells were identical. All cells had the same initial conditions and no time delay. It is important to notice however that clinical BPs with all identical PM cells would lack robustness to external perturbations. For example they may completely stop firing after acetylcholine stimulation. Cellular diversity is indeed an important aspect to preserve robustness in the native sinus node [36].
  3. The number of neighbors was approximately the same for each cell. Different number of neighbors could create electrotonic disparities between PM clusters and induce confusion with effects of porosity on occurrence of automaticity.

No reentry or asynchronous activation was detected in the simulations; this fact is an indication of strong intercellular coupling [28,29,3739] but also may be limited by the homogeneous initial conditions used in the simulations. But the strongest coupling is not necessarily the best for clinical in situ BPs, without no-flux boundary conditions. In fact, to maintain source-sink balance with the atrium, native SAN cells are coupled with low conductance connexins (Cx-45) instead of high conductance Cx-43 [40]. There is indeed an inverse proportional relationship between coupling strength and the safety factor of propagation [41].

and Ncluster as a function of Daut and displayed remarkable similarities with our previous study [14], despite different model structure and different number of neighbors. In fact, average of the maximum PM cluster size monotonically increased with Daut, with a transition around Daut = 0.5 (Fig 5). However, in this study we brought deeper spatial characterizations compared to the previous one. For example, the sharpness of this transition was demonstrated to be inversely proportional to Daut,max (Fig 6). The sharpness of the transition relied on two related phenomena: aggregation of clusters at low and «fusion» [14] of clusters at high . For low (heterogeneous spatial distribution of PM cells) Scluster grew mainly because of aggregation and was proportional to Daut which increased linearly, hence showing a smooth transition. For higher (homogeneous spatial distribution) Scluster grew mainly because of «fusion» since there was more nucleation and less aggregation. In fact, as Daut increases, clusters start having common neighboring available sites. When a PM cell is placed on one of those sites, previously separated clusters «fuse» into one bigger cluster. Decrease of Ncluster indicates a start in the «fusion» process, systematically above Daut,max. So started growing slowly for high and low Daut because there was almost no aggregation and no «fusion». Once Daut,max was reached, «fusion» process provoked a sharp increase of and hence a sharp transition.

Higher Daut and lower led to more chance of having automaticity ([n>0]) (Fig 8). Even higher Daut and lower were necessary for all simulations to show automaticity ([n = 8]). The lower was, the lower Daut was required to generate automaticity.

The transition curves are also a major characterization improvement, compared to our previous study [14]. Superimposing transition curves over and porosity color scale maps (Fig 9) gave crucial information about relationship between the monolayer microstructure organization and occurrence of automaticity. It was really interesting to observe that small at low could generate spontaneous activity while large at high could not. A big cluster at high may contain too much inside spots with quiescent cells and not be able to fire an AP, while a small cluster at low containing no inside quiescent spot at all will be able to do it. This is where porosity remarkably came into play. Porosity established the importance of electrotonic source-sink balance inside the PM cluster itself.

Spontaneous activity occurs more often with strong automaticity (Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2). Basically, lower was needed and higher porosity was tolerated for automaticity with stronger PM cells to be observed.

For each value, average autonomous cycle length decreased with increasing Daut (Fig 10) since bigger clusters (with reasonably low porosity) have more electrotonic driving force. Unsurprisingly, strong automaticity brought smaller period of activity (lower ), but also resulted in higher ranges of , i.e. more intrinsic variability for dissimilar spatial patterns. Stronger automaticity allowed occurrence of spontaneous activity in more difficult conditions (lower , and higher porosity), but the resulting periods would be noticeably higher compared to more favorable conditions. On a clinical point of view, this result means that creating BPs with stronger automaticity would not solve the problem of not having control over the fate of the PM cells in situ (intrinsic variability). The generated BP may have better chance to display automaticity, but would have very disparate performances from one patient to another. The best way to bypass the problem is to create multiple BPs ex vivo, pick the cultured BP with the targeted performance and then graft it to the patient myocardium.

In accordance with the literature [14,42,43], foci were usually located at the border (Fig 11) since, with no-flux boundary condition, border clusters had less cells to depolarize. Strong PM cells led to more central foci because more clusters had enough electrotonic driving force to depolarize neighboring cells without interacting with the no-flux boundary condition. It was interesting to notice that anisotropy yielded more border foci in the longitudinal direction compared to the transverse direction. In fact, because of the aspect ratio, there were actually more cells at the two longitudinal borders and thus more chance of having a sufficiently bigger to fire an AP.

Electrical activations were less synchronous in anisotropic monolayers (Fig 12). Very low in the longitudinal direction were hindered by very high in the transverse direction, leading to an electrical activation that was globally less synchronous. The evolution of as a function of for Daut ≥ 0.8 is very interesting and requires further investigations. Further investigations are also needed to explain how structural linear anisotropy consistently induced more intrinsic variability for both similar and dissimilar spatial patterns. Anisotropy had also limited effect on occurrence of automaticity and , compared to strength of automaticity. If there was indeed an effect, it eventually happened below the 5% resolution of Daut and . Automaticity strength and anisotropy may not be as independent as displayed in this study. Anisotropy has been shown to induce changes in intracellular calcium transients ([Ca2+]i) dynamics, decreasing the diastolic [Ca2+]i levels and increasing [Ca2+]i influx per cardiac cycle [44]. Anisotropy may also alter the properties of voltage-gated ion channels, notably expression and regulatory properties of voltage-gated calcium channels [45]. So, on a strict structural point of view (i.e. aspect ratio and distribution of gap junctions), anisotropy may not have an impact, but it may indirectly affect automaticity strength, which then will have an effect on spontaneous activity. As such, even if linear structural anisotropy does not increase occurrence of automaticity and does not decrease intrinsic variability, it may still be clinically interesting.

This study offered crucial insights on the relationships between the microstructure of the BP and its macroscopic behavior. Automaticity strength and structural linear anisotropy may modulate effects of density and spatial distribution of PM cells on the spontaneous activity of the BP, but will probably not eliminate intrinsic variability among BPs. Therapeutic procedures that do not take characteristics of spatial distribution into account (eg. cell and gene therapies) may end up with a non-negligible intrinsic variability, despite standardized protocols. Increasing the number of pacemaker cells may not solve the issue. As a matter of fact, the native SAN tissue exhibits a specific architecture with gradual transition of intermediate cells and gradually decreasing density of pacemaker cells from the center to the periphery. That spatial arrangement promotes automaticity by maintaining the delicate balance in the source-sink relationship between the SAN and the surrounding atrial tissue [36]. With an unknown spatial arrangement, that balance may randomly be compromised, hence the intrinsic variability. Furthermore, unlike the SAN which is electrically isolated from the rest of the atrium with the exception of few exit pathways, BPs lack electrotonic barrier at the macroscopic level, another challenge to their performance. All those facts stress the importance of ex vivo design and performance assessments on BPs in bioreactors before implantation to patients.

A sheet-based BP as a replacement to the normal sinus node has important intrinsic differences with the physiological structure. The normal pacemaker is a compact node of heterogeneous spontaneous cells believed to be connected at specific exit points thus limiting contact to a restricted number of atrial cells [46]. The simulated BP in this study are very different where a population of autonomous cells are connected to resting ventricular myocytes, both having similar morphology and dimensions. Cell dimensions and morphologies vary between pacemaker cells (assuming spindle-like cell morphology as in the sinus node) and resting but excitable cardiomyocyte (with also differences between atrial and ventricular cells). Cardiomyocyte dimensions is well known to affect electrical propagation [47]. Thus, important work is still needed to study the differences in spontaneous activity of BP monolayer when considering morphological differences between cell types although the differences between cell types (sinus node cell, atrial and ventricular-like derived cardiomyocytes) for derived cardiomyocytes may not be as important as in adult hearts. More importantly, BP activity when electrically coupled to myocardium in order to drive the tissue will be depressed by the electrotonic effect [48] and biomimetism of the sinus node coupling structure to the atria may need to be considered for coupling the BP to the myocardium.

Conclusion

In summary, a pure change from isotropic to anisotropic substrate modelled by an elongated cell shape and anisotropic intercellular conductivity without modifications of ion channel expression nor spatial distribution has limited effects on spontaneous activity. However, increasing the intrinsic rate of autonomous cells has a much stronger effects. Although the two were studied together and independently, it is of importance to note that there is a strong possibility that both changes (anisotropy and autonomous strength) could be coupled [44]. Further work is thus needed to uncover this importance of the interaction (and by how much methods to induce cellular anisotropy can increase the cellular automaticity strength) and to elucidate how it could favor the BP development.

Supporting information

S1 Movie. Time course of activation times for the isotropic geometry and weak pacemaker cells.

Parameters are Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2, Daut = 0.8 and = 0.1.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.s001

(MP4)

S2 Movie. Time course of activation times for the anisotropic geometry and weak pacemaker cells.

Parameters are Ibias = 2.6 μA/cm2, Daut = 0.8 and = 0.1.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.s002

(MP4)

S3 Movie. Time course of activation times for the isotropic geometry and strong pacemaker cells.

Parameters are Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2, Daut = 0.3 and = 0.1.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.s003

(MP4)

S4 Movie. Time course of activation times for the anisotropic geometry and strong pacemaker cells.

Parameters are Ibias = 3.5 μA/cm2, Daut = 0.3 and = 0.1.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005978.s004

(MP4)

References

  1. 1. Mangoni ME, Nargeot J. Genesis and Regulation of the Heart Automaticity. Physiol Rev. 2008;88: 919–982. pmid:18626064
  2. 2. Rozanski GJ, Lipsius SL. Electrophysiology of functional subsidiary pacemakers in canine right atrium. Am J Physiol. 1985;249: H594–603. pmid:4037107
  3. 3. Monfredi O, Maltsev VA, Lakatta EG. Modern Concepts Concerning the Origin of the Heartbeat. Physiology. 2013;28: 74–92. pmid:23455768
  4. 4. Maltsev VA, Lakatta EG. Dynamic interactions of an intracellular Ca2+ clock and membrane ion channel clock underlie robust initiation and regulation of cardiac pacemaker function. Cardiovasc Res. 2008;77: 274–284. pmid:18006441
  5. 5. Maltsev VA, Vinogradova TM, Lakatta EG. The Emergence of a General Theory of the Initiation and Strength of the Heartbeat. J Pharmacol Sci. 2006;100: 338–369. pmid:16799255
  6. 6. Severi S, Fantini M, Charawi LA, DiFrancesco D. An updated computational model of rabbit sinoatrial action potential to investigate the mechanisms of heart rate modulation. J Physiol. 2012;590: 4483–4499. pmid:22711956
  7. 7. DiFrancesco D. The Role of the Funny Current in Pacemaker Activity. Circ Res. 2010;106: 434–446. pmid:20167941
  8. 8. Stern MD, Maltseva LA, Juhaszova M, Sollott SJ, Lakatta EG, Maltsev VA. Hierarchical clustering of ryanodine receptors enables emergence of a calcium clock in sinoatrial node cells. J Gen Physiol. 2014;143: 577–604. pmid:24778430
  9. 9. Sasse P, Zhang J, Cleemann L, Morad M, Hescheler J, Fleischmann BK. Intracellular Ca2+ Oscillations, a Potential Pacemaking Mechanism in Early Embryonic Heart Cells. J Gen Physiol. 2007;130: 133–144. pmid:17664344
  10. 10. Zaniboni M, Cacciani F, Lux RL. Beat-to-Beat Cycle Length Variability of Spontaneously Beating Guinea Pig Sinoatrial Cells: Relative Contributions of the Membrane and Calcium Clocks. PLOS ONE. 2014;9: e100242. pmid:24940609
  11. 11. Munshi NV, Olson EN. Improving cardiac rhythm with a biological pacemaker. Science. 2014;345: 268–269. pmid:25035474
  12. 12. Hu Y-F, Dawkins JF, Cho HC, Marbán E, Cingolani E. Biological pacemaker created by minimally invasive somatic reprogramming in pigs with complete heart block. Sci Transl Med. 2014;6: 245ra94. pmid:25031269
  13. 13. Cai J, Lin G, Jiang H, Yang B, Jiang X, Yu Q, et al. Transplanted neonatal cardiomyocytes as a potential biological pacemaker in pigs with complete atrioventricular block. Transplantation. 2006;81: 1022–1026. pmid:16612279
  14. 14. Duverger JE, Boudreau-Béland J, Le MD, Comtois P. Multicellular automaticity of cardiac cell monolayers: effects of density and spatial distribution of pacemaker cells. New J Phys. 2014;16: 113046.
  15. 15. Guo W, Kamiya K, Cheng J, Toyama J. Changes in action potentials and ion currents in long-term cultured neonatal rat ventricular cells. Am J Physiol. 1996;271: C93–102. pmid:8760034
  16. 16. Gomez JP, Potreau D, Branka JE, Raymond G. Developmental changes in Ca2+ currents from newborn rat cardiomyocytes in primary culture. Pflugers Arch. 1994;428: 241–249. pmid:7816546
  17. 17. Boink GJJ, Christoffels VM, Robinson RB, Tan HL. The past, present, and future of pacemaker therapies. Trends Cardiovasc Med. 2015;25: 661–673. pmid:26001958
  18. 18. Bursac N, Parker KK, Iravanian S, Tung L. Cardiomyocyte Cultures With Controlled Macroscopic Anisotropy. Circ Res. 2002;91: e45–e54. pmid:12480825
  19. 19. Liau B, Christoforou N, Leong K, Bursac N. Pluripotent Stem Cell-derived Cardiac Tissue Patch with Advanced Structure and Function. Biomaterials. 2011;32: 9180–9187. pmid:21906802
  20. 20. Blazeski A, Kostecki GM, Tung L. Engineered heart slices for electrophysiological and contractile studies. Biomaterials. 2015;55: 119–128. pmid:25934457
  21. 21. Campbell PH, Feinberg AW, Goss JA, Parker KK, Ripplinger CM. Anisotropic biological pacemakers and av bypasses [Internet]. WO2012048242 A1, 2012. Available: http://www.google.ca/patents/WO2012048242A1
  22. 22. Diego C de, Chen F, Xie Y, Pai RK, Slavin L, Parker J, et al. Anisotropic conduction block and reentry in neonatal rat ventricular myocyte monolayers. Am J Physiol—Heart Circ Physiol. 2011;300: H271–H278. pmid:21037233
  23. 23. Schwan J, Kwaczala AT, Ryan TJ, Bartulos O, Ren Y, Sewanan LR, et al. Anisotropic engineered heart tissue made from laser-cut decellularized myocardium. Sci Rep. 2016;6. pmid:27572147
  24. 24. Spach MS, Heidlage JF, Barr RC, Dolber PC. Cell size and communication: role in structural and electrical development and remodeling of the heart. Heart Rhythm. 2004;1: 500–515. pmid:15851207
  25. 25. Kim JM, Bursac N, Henriquez CS. A computer model of engineered cardiac monolayers. Biophys J. 2010;98: 1762–1771. pmid:20441739
  26. 26. Jacquemet V, Henriquez CS. Loading effect of fibroblast-myocyte coupling on resting potential, impulse propagation, and repolarization: insights from a microstructure model. Am J Physiol—Heart Circ Physiol. 2008;294: H2040–H2052. pmid:18310514
  27. 27. Luo CH, Rudy Y. A model of the ventricular cardiac action potential. Depolarization, repolarization, and their interaction. Circ Res. 1991;68: 1501–1526. pmid:1709839
  28. 28. Kanakov OI, Osipov GV, Chan C-K, Kurths J. Cluster synchronization and spatio-temporal dynamics in networks of oscillatory and excitable Luo-Rudy cells. Chaos Woodbury N. 2007;17: 015111. pmid:17411268
  29. 29. Kryukov AK, Petrov VS, Averyanova LS, Osipov GV, Chen W, Drugova O, et al. Synchronization phenomena in mixed media of passive, excitable, and oscillatory cells. Chaos Interdiscip J Nonlinear Sci. 2008;18: 037129. pmid:19045503
  30. 30. AUTO [Internet]. [cited 12 Jul 2017]. Available: http://indy.cs.concordia.ca/auto/
  31. 31. Bayly PV, KenKnight BH, Rogers JM, Hillsley RE, Ideker RE, Smith WM. Estimation of conduction velocity vector fields from epicardial mapping data. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 1998;45: 563–571. pmid:9581054
  32. 32. Korhonen T, Hänninen SL, Tavi P. Model of Excitation-Contraction Coupling of Rat Neonatal Ventricular Myocytes. Biophys J. 2009;96: 1189–1209. pmid:19186154
  33. 33. Paci M, Hyttinen J, Aalto-Setälä K, Severi S. Computational models of ventricular- and atrial-like human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiomyocytes. Ann Biomed Eng. 2013;41: 2334–2348. pmid:23722932
  34. 34. Hui BBCB, Dokos S, Lovell NH. Parameter Identifiability of Cardiac Ionic Models Using a Novel CellML Least Squares Optimization Tool. 2007 29th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. 2007. pp. 5307–5310. https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMBS.2007.4353539
  35. 35. Shajahan TK, Borek B, Shrier A, Glass L. Scaling properties of conduction velocity in heterogeneous excitable media. Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys. 2011;84: 046208. pmid:22181246
  36. 36. Unudurthi SD, Wolf RM, Hund TJ. Role of sinoatrial node architecture in maintaining a balanced source-sink relationship and synchronous cardiac pacemaking. Front Physiol. 2014;5. pmid:25505419
  37. 37. Bub G, Shrier A, Glass L. Global organization of dynamics in oscillatory heterogeneous excitable media. Phys Rev Lett. 2005;94: 028105. pmid:15698236
  38. 38. Bub G, Shrier A, Glass L. Spiral wave generation in heterogeneous excitable media. Phys Rev Lett. 2002;88: 058101. pmid:11863783
  39. 39. Steinberg BE, Glass L, Shrier A, Bub G. The role of heterogeneities and intercellular coupling in wave propagation in cardiac tissue. Philos Trans R Soc Lond Math Phys Eng Sci. 2006;364: 1299–1311. pmid:16608709
  40. 40. Boyett MR, Inada S, Yoo S, Li J, Liu J, Tellez J, et al. Connexins in the sinoatrial and atrioventricular nodes. Adv Cardiol. 2006;42: 175–197. pmid:16646591
  41. 41. Kleber AG, Saffitz JE. Role of the intercalated disc in cardiac propagation and arrhythmogenesis. Front Physiol. 2014;5. pmid:25368581
  42. 42. Boudreau-Béland J, Duverger JE, Petitjean E, Maguy A, Ledoux J, Comtois P. Spatiotemporal Stability of Neonatal Rat Cardiomyocyte Monolayers Spontaneous Activity Is Dependent on the Culture Substrate. PLoS ONE. 2015;10. pmid:26035822
  43. 43. Ponard JGC, Kondratyev AA, Kucera JP. Mechanisms of Intrinsic Beating Variability in Cardiac Cell Cultures and Model Pacemaker Networks. Biophys J. 2007;92: 3734–3752. pmid:17325022
  44. 44. Pong T, Adams WJ, Bray M-A, Feinberg AW, Sheehy SP, Werdich AA, et al. Hierarchical architecture influences calcium dynamics in engineered cardiac muscle. Exp Biol Med Maywood NJ. 2011;236: 366–373. pmid:21330361
  45. 45. Walsh KB, Parks GE. Changes in cardiac myocyte morphology alter the properties of voltage-gated ion channels. Cardiovasc Res. 2002;55: 64–75. pmid:12062709
  46. 46. Li N, Hansen BJ, Csepe TA, Zhao J, Ignozzi AJ, Sul LV, et al. Redundant and diverse intranodal pacemakers and conduction pathways protect the human sinoatrial node from failure. Sci Transl Med. 2017;9. pmid:28747516
  47. 47. Spach MS, Heidlage JF, Dolber PC, Barr RC. Electrophysiological Effects of Remodeling Cardiac Gap Junctions and Cell Size. Circ Res. 2000;86: 302–311. pmid:10679482
  48. 48. Xie Y, Sato D, Garfinkel A, Qu Z, Weiss JN. So Little Source, So Much Sink: Requirements for Afterdepolarizations to Propagate in Tissue. Biophys J. 2010;99: 1408–1415. pmid:20816052