scholarly journals Multiple effects of calcium antagonists on plateau currents in cardiac Purkinje fibers.

1975 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
R S Kass ◽  
R W Tsien

We studied the influence of Mn, La, and D600 on action potentials and plateau currents in cardiac Purkinje fibers. The Ca antagonists each abolished the second inward current, but they failed to act selectively. Voltage clamp experiments revealed two additional effects: decrease of slow outward current (iotachi) activation, and increase of net outward time-independent plateau current. These effects occurred at inhibitor concentrations used in earlier studies, and were essential to the reconstruction of observed Ca antagonist effects on electrical activity. The inhibitory influence of Mn, La, and D600 on iotachi suggested that iotachi activation might depend upon prior Ca entry. This hypothesis was not supported, however, when [Ca]omicron was varied: elevating [Ca]omicron enhanced Ca entry, but iotachi was nevertheless depressed. Thus, the results suggested instead that Ca antagonists and Ca ions have rather similar effects on iotachi, possibly mediated by changes in membrane surface charge.

1985 ◽  
Vol 249 (1) ◽  
pp. H122-H132
Author(s):  
J. M. Jaeger ◽  
W. R. Gibbons

We have tried to answer two fundamental questions concerning the outward current IX1 of cardiac Purkinje fibers. 1) Is it possible that current changes identified as arising from IX1 in voltage-clamp experiments are actually manifestations of changes in the slow inward current (Isi); and 2) is IX1 in fact required to produce the electrical phenomena attributed to it? Isi behavior and the role of IX1 were explored using computer simulation. The Isi model produced current changes during depolarizations and hyperpolarizations from depolarized resting potentials like those attributed to IX1. It also produced a component of "tail currents" that behaved like IX1. If these current changes were analyzed, assuming that an outward current is responsible, the resulting kinetics and current voltage relation would be very similar to the kinetics and current voltage relation reported for IX1. Using the McAllister, Noble, and Tsien formulation of the Purkinje fiber action potential, we found that IX1 is not essential for repolarization of the reconstructed action potential nor is it needed to reproduce interval duration effects and the effects of applied current in that model. Data suggesting that calcium channel blockers reduce IX1 and that catecholamines increase IX1 may be explained as arising from changes in Isi. Thus many manifestations of IX1 can be explained as arising from unanticipated behavior of Isi, and IX1 does not necessarily play a key role in generating Purkinje fiber electrical activity.


1986 ◽  
Vol 251 (2) ◽  
pp. H297-H306 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. Gilmour ◽  
J. J. Salata ◽  
J. R. Davis

Canine cardiac Purkinje fibers and atrial trabeculae and rat and cat papillary muscles superfused with a hyperkalemic, hypoxic, and acidotic Tyrode solution were depolarized to membrane potentials (-70 to -60 mV) at which action potential amplitude declined as the coupling intervals of pacing stimuli were prolonged from 500 to 4,500 ms. The rate-related decline of action potential amplitude appeared to be due to time-dependent recovery of the early outward current rather than to a decrease in inward calcium current, since it was prevented by 4-aminopyridine (1.0 mM), but not by isoproterenol (1.0 microM), caffeine (5.0 mM), or CsCl (5-20 mM) and it was accompanied by an exponential increase of developed tension. Experiments using Purkinje fibers mounted in a single sucrose gap chamber demonstrated that the rate-related decline of action potential amplitude was maximal at membrane potentials between -70 and -40 mV and was negligible at less negative or more negative membrane potentials. These results may pertain to the mechanism for deceleration-dependent bundle branch block.


1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 1404-1420 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Harris-Warrick ◽  
L. M. Coniglio ◽  
R. M. Levini ◽  
S. Gueron ◽  
J. Guckenheimer

1. The lateral pyloric (LP) neuron is a component of the 14-neuron pyloric central pattern generator in the stomatogastric ganglion of the spiny lobster, Panulirus interruptus. In the pyloric rhythm, this neuron fires rhythmic bursts of action potentials whose phasing depends on the pattern of synaptic inhibition from other network neurons and on the intrinsic postinhibitory rebound properties of the LP cell itself. Bath-applied dopamine excites the LP cell and causes its activity to be phase advanced in the pyloric motor pattern. At least part of this modulatory effect is due to dopaminergic modulation of the intrinsic rate of postinhibitory rebound in the LP cell. 2. The LP neuron was isolated from all detectable synaptic input. We measured the rate of recovery after 1-s hyperpolarizing current injections of varying amplitudes, quantifying the latency to the first spike following the hyperpolarizing prepulse and the interval between the first and second action potentials. Dopamine reduced both the first spike latency and the first interspike interval (ISI) in the isolated LP neuron. During the hyperpolarizating pre-steps, the LP cell showed a slow depolarizing sag voltage that was enhanced by dopamine. 3. We used voltage clamp to analyze dopamine modulation of subthreshold ionic currents whose activity is affected by hyperpolarizing prepulses. Dopamine modulated the transient potassium current IA by reducing its maximal conductance and shifting its voltage dependence for activation and inactivation to more depolarized voltages. This outward current is normally transiently activated after hyperpolarization of the LP cell, and delays the rate of postinhibitory rebound; by reducing IA, dopamine thus accelerates the rate of rebound of the LP neuron. 4. Dopamine also modulated the hyperpolarization-activated inward current Ih by shifting its voltage dependence for activation 20 mV in the depolarizing direction and accelerating its rate of activation. This enhanced inward current helps accelerate the rate of rebound in the LP cell after inhibition. 5. The relative roles of Ih and IA in determining the first spike latency and first ISI were explored using pharmacological blockers of Ih (Cs+) and IA [4-aminopyridine (4-AP)]. Blockade of Ih prolonged the first spike latency and first ISI, but only slightly reduced the net effect of dopamine. In the continued presence of Cs+, blockade of IA with 4-AP greatly shortened the first spike latency and first ISI. Under conditions where both Ih and IA were blocked, dopamine had no additional effect on the LP cell. 6. We used the dynamic clamp technique to further study the relative roles of IA and Ih modulation in dopamine's phase advance of the LP cell. We blocked the endogenous Ih with Cs+ and replaced it with a simulated current generated by a computer model of Ih. The neuron with simulated Ih gave curves relating the hyperpolarizing prepulse amplitude to first spike latency that were the same as in the untreated cell. Changing the computer parameters of the simulated Ih to those induced by dopamine without changing IA caused only a slight reduction in first spike latency, which was approximately 20% of the total reduction caused by dopamine in an untreated cell. Bath application of dopamine in the presence of Cs+ and simulated Ih (with control parameters) allowed us to determine the effect of altering IA but not Ih: this caused a significant reduction in first spike latency, but it was still only approximately 70% of the effect of dopamine in the untreated cell. Finally, in the continued presence of dopamine, changing the parameters of the simulated Ih to those observed with dopamine reduced the first spike latency to that seen with dopamine in the untreated cell. 7. We generated a mathematical model of the lobster LP neuron, based on the model of Buchholtz et al. for the crab LP neuron.


1980 ◽  
Vol 238 (2) ◽  
pp. H237-H243
Author(s):  
S. L. Lipsius ◽  
W. R. Gibbons

The effect of acetylcholine (ACh) on the electrical activity of sheep cardiac Purkinje fibers was studied using standard microelectrode techniques. Most fibers showed a definite sequence of changes when exposed to ACh. Initially, action potential duration (APD) increased markedly. After about 20 s, the maximum diastolic potential (MDP) started to become more negative and, at the same time, the rate of increase in APD slowed. Once the MDP stabilized at a more negative level, the APD usually resumed its rapid increase. ACh also increased the slope of diastolic depolarization and made the plateau voltage more positive. APD was increased by ACh concentrations as low as 10(-7) M, and it increased with concentrations up to 10(-5) M (the highest concentration tested). ACh-induced increases in APD depended on the stimulation frequency; 2-min exposures to 10(-6) M ACh increased APD by 76.8 +/- 14.7% at 6 min-1 and 17.7 +/- 4.2% at 60 min-1. Atropine blocked all the effects of ACh. Hexamethonium did not prevent the ACh effects. It is concluded that ACh acts via muscarinic receptors. The changes in APD and MDP appear to be separate events, and it is difficult to see how the former effect may be explained by known actions of ACh.


1982 ◽  
Vol 243 (1) ◽  
pp. H77-H86 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Lipsius ◽  
W. R. Gibbons

We examined relationships between isometric tension and membrane currents in sheep Purkinje fibers voltage clamped by the two-microelectrode method. Oscillatory restitution of contractility was accompanied by a small oscillation in membrane current and by an aftercontraction. The membrane current oscillation resembled the transient inward current (TI) others have reported in the presence of strophanthidin. Twitches produced by voltage clamp depolarizations did not correlate with net outward current in normal solution, but when the early outward current was blocked by 0.5 mM 4-aminopyridine, the residual outward current did correlate with twitches elicited by strong depolarizing clamps, particularly in solutions containing higher than normal calcium concentrations. The results illustrate important similarities and differences between membrane current behavior in sheep Purkinje fibers and behavior others have reported in calf fibers. Correlations between restitution, aftercontractions, and TI's, and between twitch tension and a component of outward current, may arise because of calcium regulation of membrane conductance, electrogenic Na-Ca exchange, or a combination of these and other mechanisms.


1986 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 833-855 ◽  
Author(s):  
J R Hume ◽  
A Uehara

Changes in membrane current in response to an elevation of [Na]i were studied in enzymatically dispersed frog atrial cells. Na loading by either intracellular dialysis or exposure to the Na ionophore monensin produces changes in membrane current that resemble the "creep currents" originally observed in cardiac Purkinje fibers during exposure to low-K solutions. Na loading induces a transient outward current during depolarizing voltage-clamp pulses, followed by an inward current in response to repolarization back to the holding potential. In contrast to cardiac Purkinje fibers, Na loading of frog atrial cells induces creep currents without accompanying transient inward currents. Creep currents induced by Na loading are insensitive to K channel antagonists like Cs and 4-aminopyridine; they are not influenced by doses of Ca channel antagonists that abolish iCa, but are sensitive to changes in [Ca]o or [Na]o. A comparison of the time course of development of inward creep currents are not tail currents associated with iCa. Inward creep currents can also be induced by experimental interventions that increase the iCa amplitude. Exposure to isoproterenol enhances the iCa amplitude and induces inward creep currents; both can be attenuated by Ca channel antagonists. Both inward and outward creep currents are blocked by low doses of La, independently of La's ability to block iCa. It is concluded that (a) creep currents are not mediated by voltage-gated Na, Ca, or K channels or by an electrogenic Na,K pump; (b) inward creep currents induced either by Na loading or in response to an increase in the amplitude of iCa are triggered by an elevation of [Ca]i; and (c) creep currents may be generated by either an electrogenic Na/Ca exchange mechanism or by a nonselective cation channel activated by [Ca]i.


1977 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
C M Baumgarten ◽  
G Isenberg ◽  
T F McDonald ◽  
R E Ten Eick

Voltage clamp hyperpolarization and depolarization result in currents consistent with depletion and accumulation of potassium in the extracellular clefts o cardiac Purkinje fibers exposed to sodium-free solutions. Upon hyperpolarization, an inward current that decreased with time (id) was observed. The time course of tail currents could not be explained by a conductance exhibiting voltage-dependent kinetics. The effect of exposure to cesium, changes in bathing media potassium concentration and osmolarity, and the behavior of membrane potential after hyperpolarizing pulses are all consistent with depletion of potassium upon hyperpolarization. A declining outward current was observed upon depolarization. Increasing the bathing media potassium concentration reduced the magnitude of this current. After voltage clamp depolarizations, membrane potential transiently became more positive. These findings suggest that accumulation of potassium occurs upon depolarization. The results indicate that changes in ionic driving force may be easily and rapidly induced. Consequently, conclusions based on the assumption that driving force remains constant during the course of a voltage step may be in error.


1987 ◽  
Vol 252 (3) ◽  
pp. H645-H652 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Terek ◽  
C. T. January

Oscillatory afterpotentials, or late afterdepolarizations, are one mechanism postulated to cause cardiac arrhythmias and possibly conduction disturbances. We studied excitability by determining strength-interval curves in Purkinje fibers under normal conditions and during the presence of oscillatory afterpotentials induced by cardiac glycoside toxicity. During exposure to acetylstrophanthidin (0.10–0.15 mg/l), the mean resting potential depolarized 5.6 mV and oscillatory afterpotentials of 3–17 mV appeared. Current threshold for evoking action potentials was reduced below control level (e.g., increased excitability) throughout electrical diastole. Associated with oscillatory afterpotentials was a marked biphasic variation in current threshold giving strength-interval curves a characteristic biphasic shape. During the rising phase of the oscillatory afterpotentials, excitability reached a maximum, whereas the minimum increase in excitability occurred during the falling phase of oscillatory afterpotentials. This biphasic change in excitability remained correlated with the oscillatory afterpotentials at different cycle lengths. Results show that during acetylstrophanthidin toxicity excitability is increased throughout electrical diastole, and characteristic time-dependent changes in excitability occur during oscillatory afterpotentials. Time-dependent changes in excitability were detected with both intra- and extracellular stimulation techniques.


1985 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 877-889 ◽  
Author(s):  
C J Nieman ◽  
D A Eisner

Membrane current and tension were measured in voltage-clamped sheep cardiac Purkinje fibers. Elevating the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) results in oscillations of membrane current and tension both at rest and during stimulation. During stimulation, an oscillatory transient inward current and an after contraction follow repolarization. We have examined the effects on the oscillations of changing the extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]o) and of adding various drugs. In agreement with previous work, high concentrations of drugs that affect the sarcoplasmic reticulum, namely caffeine (10-20 mM), tetracaine (1 mM), and ryanodine (10 microM), abolish the oscillations. However, at lower concentrations, these three drugs have different effects on the oscillations. Caffeine (1-2 mM) decreases the oscillation amplitude but increases the frequency. Tetracaine (100-500 microM) has little effect on the magnitude of the oscillations but decreases their frequency. Ryanodine, at all concentrations used (0.1-10 microM), eventually abolishes the oscillations but, in doing so, decreases the magnitude, leaving the frequency unaffected. When [Ca2+]o was changed in order to vary [Ca2+]i, both the frequency and the magnitude of the oscillations always changed in the same direction. This suggests that these three drugs have effects in addition to just changing [Ca2+]i.


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