Sodium Channel Distribution Within the Rabbit Atrioventricular Node as Analysed by Confocal Microscopy

1 Paired 20 μm thick sections of fresh frozen tissue taken from the frontal plane of the rabbit atrioventricular (AV) nodal region were processed for histology and immunohistochemistry. Confocal microscopy was used to image the distribution of sodium channels using IgG (R12) developed against a highly conserved sequence in the interdomain 3–4 region of cloned sodium channels. 2 In ventricular and atrial cells, sodium channel immunofluorescence was localized to lateral membranes and T‐tubules. In the open AV node, levels of sodium channel immunofluorescence in the transitional cell zone and in the lower nodal cell tract were comparable to that found in the atrial and ventricular myocardium. 3 In the enclosed AV node a gradation of sodium channel immunofluorescence is present such that peripherally located circumferential transitional cells display high levels of immunofluorescence, comparable to that of atrial and ventricular myocardium, while centrally located midnodal cells display decreased levels of or no immunofluorescence. 4 In order to correlate the distribution of sodium channels with the distribution of gap junctions, we used IgG directed against the carboxyl terminus of connexin43 (CT‐360). Ventricular cell immunofluorescence was localized primarily to the intercalated disk region, while in the AV node, the pattern of distribution was found to be similar to that of sodium channels. 5 The reduced levels of and/or absence of immunofluorescence in the midnodal cell region indicates a paucity of sodium channel and connexin43 protein expression in this region of the AV node that would favour slow impulse conduction.

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