A Novel Quantitative Electrocardiography Strategy Reveals the Electroinhibitory Effect of Tamoxifen on the Mouse Heart

AbstractTamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, was initially used to treat cancer in women and more recently to induce conditional gene editing in rodent hearts. However, little is known about the baseline biological effects of tamoxifen on the myocardium. In order to clarify the short-term effects of tamoxifen on cardiac electrophysiology of myocardium, we applied a single-chest-lead quantitative method and analyzed the short-term electrocardiographic phenotypes induced by tamoxifen in the heart of adult female mice. We found that tamoxifen prolonged the PP interval and caused a decreased heartbeat, and further induced atrioventricular block by gradually prolonging the PR interval. Further correlation analysis suggested that tamoxifen had a synergistic and dose-independent inhibition on the time course of the PP interval and PR interval. This prolongation of the critical time course may represent a tamoxifen-specific ECG excitatory-inhibitory mechanism, leading to a reduction in the number of supraventricular action potentials and thus bradycardia. Segmental reconstructions showed that tamoxifen induced a decrease in the conduction velocity of action potentials throughout the atria and parts of the ventricles, resulting in a flattening of the P wave and R wave. In addition, we detected the previously reported prolongation of the QT interval, which may be due to a prolonged duration of the ventricular repolarizing T wave rather than the depolarizing QRS complex. ...
Source: Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research - Category: Cardiology Source Type: research