Since its first description in 1979, the hyperpolarization-activated funny current (I-f) has been the object of intensive research aimed at understanding its role in cardiac pacemaker activity and its modulation by the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system. I-f was described in isolated tissue strips of the rabbit sinoatrial node using the double-electrode voltage-clamp technique. Since then, the rabbit has been the principal animal model for studying pacemaker activity and I-f for more than 20 years. In 2001, the first study describing the electrophysiological properties of mouse sinoatrial pacemaker myocytes and those of I-f was published. It was soon followed by the description of murine myocytes of the...
In mammals cardiac rate is determined by the duration of the diastolic depolarization of sinoatrial ...
In mammals the heart rhythm originates from specialized myocytes of the sinoatrial node (SAN) due to...
Funny" (f) channels underlie the cardiac "pacemaker" If current, originally described as an inward c...
International audienceSince its first description in 1979, the hyperpolarization-activated funny cur...
In the adult animal the sinoatrial node (SAN) rhythmically generates a depolarizing wave that propag...
First described over a quarter of a century ago, the cardiac pacemaker funny (I(f)) current has been...
Activation of the "funny" (pacemaker, I f) current during the diastolic depolarization phase of an a...
In the adult animal the sinoatrial node (SAN) rhythmically generates a depolarizing wave that propag...
The generation of cardiac pacemaker activity is a complex phenomenon which requires the coordinated ...
The mouse is the second mammalian species, after the human, in which substantial amount of the genom...
Since its first description in 1979 (Brown et al., 1979. Nature 280, 235-236), extensive work on the...
AbstractThe mouse is the second mammalian species, after the human, in which substantial amount of t...
Cardiac arrhythmias can follow disruption of the normal cellular electrophysiological processes unde...
Cardiomyocytes located in the central part of the sinoatrial node are responsible for generating the...
Cardiac pacemaking is generated and modulated by the coordinated action of several processes. In mam...
In mammals cardiac rate is determined by the duration of the diastolic depolarization of sinoatrial ...
In mammals the heart rhythm originates from specialized myocytes of the sinoatrial node (SAN) due to...
Funny" (f) channels underlie the cardiac "pacemaker" If current, originally described as an inward c...
International audienceSince its first description in 1979, the hyperpolarization-activated funny cur...
In the adult animal the sinoatrial node (SAN) rhythmically generates a depolarizing wave that propag...
First described over a quarter of a century ago, the cardiac pacemaker funny (I(f)) current has been...
Activation of the "funny" (pacemaker, I f) current during the diastolic depolarization phase of an a...
In the adult animal the sinoatrial node (SAN) rhythmically generates a depolarizing wave that propag...
The generation of cardiac pacemaker activity is a complex phenomenon which requires the coordinated ...
The mouse is the second mammalian species, after the human, in which substantial amount of the genom...
Since its first description in 1979 (Brown et al., 1979. Nature 280, 235-236), extensive work on the...
AbstractThe mouse is the second mammalian species, after the human, in which substantial amount of t...
Cardiac arrhythmias can follow disruption of the normal cellular electrophysiological processes unde...
Cardiomyocytes located in the central part of the sinoatrial node are responsible for generating the...
Cardiac pacemaking is generated and modulated by the coordinated action of several processes. In mam...
In mammals cardiac rate is determined by the duration of the diastolic depolarization of sinoatrial ...
In mammals the heart rhythm originates from specialized myocytes of the sinoatrial node (SAN) due to...
Funny" (f) channels underlie the cardiac "pacemaker" If current, originally described as an inward c...