Publication | Open Access
Role of changes in [Ca2+]i in energy deprivation contracture.
79
Citations
14
References
1987
Year
Cardiac MuscleCellular PhysiologyPhysiological ResearchBioenergeticsApplied PhysiologyEnergy Deprivation ContractureHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyIon ChannelsMm CyanideCholine Chloride SubstitutionCell BiologySignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyCellular BiochemistryMetabolismMedicine
Mechanisms of energy deprivation contracture were investigated in cultured chick embryo ventricular cells. In the presence of zero-extracellular-Na+, (choline chloride substitution)-nominal-zero-Ca2+ [( Ca2+] approximately 5 microM), exposure of ventricular cells to 1 mM cyanide (CN) and 20 mM 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG)-zero-glucose solution resulted in the development of a contracture (video motion detector) in 5.9 +/- 0.5 minutes. Early after contracture development, the resupply of extracellular Na+, in the continued presence of CN + 2-DG, resulted in a rapid partial relaxation (t1/2 = 1.9 +/- 0.3 seconds), associated with an increase in 45Ca efflux, presumably due to transsarcolemmal Ca2+ extrusion due to Na+-Ca2+ exchange. Resupply of glucose and removal of CN + 2-DG, in the continued absence of Na+, resulted in an initially slower (t1/2 = 11.6 +/- 2.5 seconds), but more complete relaxation of contracture, which was not associated with increased Ca2+ efflux. Pretreatment with 20 mM caffeine delayed the onset of contracture (9.2 +/- 1.1 minutes) and resulted in a contracture that could not be relaxed by resupply of external Na+ only. Studies using the fluorescent Ca2+ probe indo 1 demonstrated that in zero-Na+-zero-Ca2+ solutions, contracture due to CN + 2-DG was associated with an initial rise in [Ca2+]i but that this did not account for all of contracture force development. In cells exposed to CN + 2-DG in the presence of normal extracellular Na+ and Ca2+ concentrations, a small rise in [Ca2+]i was associated with initial contracture development, consistently preceding the development of a larger accelerated contracture presumably due to ATP depletion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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