scholarly journals Simulated calcium current can both cause calcium loading in and trigger calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum of a skinned canine cardiac Purkinje cell.

1985 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Fabiato

Skinned canine cardiac Purkinje cells were stimulated by regularly repeated microinjection-aspiration sequences that were programmed to simulate the fast initial component of the transsarcolemmal Ca2+ current and the subsequent slow component corresponding to noninactivating Ca2+ channels. The simulated fast component triggered a tension transient through Ca2+-induced release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). The simulated slow component did not affect the tension transient during which it was first introduced but it potentiated the subsequent transients. The potentiation was not observed when the SR function had been destroyed by detergent. The potentiation decreased progressively when the slow component was separated by an increasing time interval from the fast component. The potentiation was progressive over several beats under conditions that decreased the rate of Ca2+ accumulation into the SR (deletion of calmodulin from the solutions; a decrease of the temperature from 22 to 12 degrees C). In the presence of a slow component, an increase of frequency caused a positive staircase, and the introduction of an extrasystole caused a postextrasystolic potentiation. There was a negative staircase and no postextrasystolic potentiation in the absence of a slow component. These results can be explained by a time- and Ca2+-dependent functional separation of the release and accumulation processes of the SR, rather than by Ca2+ circulation between anatomically distinct loading and release compartments. The fast initial component of transsarcolemmal Ca2+ current would trigger Ca2+ release, whereas the slow component would load the SR with an amount of Ca2+ available for release during the subsequent tension transients.

1982 ◽  
Vol 242 (5) ◽  
pp. H834-H843 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Maylie

Neonatal cardiac cells were smaller in diameter, having a lower concentration of myofilaments than cardiac cells of the adult cat. The sarcoplasmic reticulum-content in 1-day-old neonates was less than in the adult, and there were no transverse tubules in the neonatal myocardium. Postextrasystolic potentiation and post-voltage clamp potentiation were significantly greater in the adult than in the neonate. Rate inotropisms consisted of a fast component (1st 6-8 beats) and a slow component (50-100 beats). The beat constants for the decay of postextrasystolic potentiation and of the fast component of a negative frequency staircase were the same in both neonate and adult. The restitution of contractility was much faster in the neonate than in the adult. Shortening of the action potential plateau suppressed twitch tension in the first beat with little further effect on subsequent shortened beats in the neonate. The structural and functional differences between the neonate and adult lead to the conclusion that two sources of activator calcium contribute to the development of tension in mammalian ventricle.


1996 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
P C Pape ◽  
D S Jong ◽  
W K Chandler

Cut muscle fibers from Rana temporaria were mounted in a double Vaseline-gap chamber and equilibrated with an end-pool solution that contained 20 mM EGTA and 1.76 mM Ca (sarcomere length, 3.3-3.8 microns; temperature, 14-16 degrees C). Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca release, delta[CaT], was estimated from changes in myoplasmic pH (Pape, P.C., D.-S. Jong, and W.K. Chandler. 1995. J. Gen. Physiol. 106:259-336). The maximal value of delta[CaT] obtained during a depleting depolarization was assumed to equal the SR Ca content before stimulation, [CaSR]R (expressed as myoplasmic concentration). After a depolarization to -55 to -40 mV in fibers with [CaSR]R = 1,000-3,000 microM, currents from intramembranous charge movement, Icm, showed an early I beta component. This was followed by an I gamma hump, which decayed within 50 ms to a small current that was maintained for as long as 500 ms. This slow current was probably a component of Icm because the amount of OFF charge, measured after depolarizations of different durations, increased according to the amount of ON charge. Icm was also measured after the SR had been depleted of most of its Ca, either by a depleting conditioning depolarization or by Ca removal from the end pools followed by a series of depleting depolarizations. The early I beta component was essentially unchanged by Ca depletion, the I gamma hump was increased (for [CaSR]R > 200 microM), the slow component was eliminated, and the total amount of OFF charge was essentially unchanged. These results suggest that the slow component of ON Icm is not movement of a new species of charge but is probably movement of Q gamma that is slowed by SR Ca release or some associated event such as the accompanying increase in myoplasmic free [Ca] that is expected to occur near the Ca release sites. The peak value of the apparent rate constant associated with this current, 2-4%/ms at pulse potentials between -48 and -40 mV, is decreased by half when [CaSR]R approximately equal to 500-1,000 microM, which gives a peak rate of SR Ca release of approximately 5-10 microM/ms.


1982 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Miyamoto ◽  
Efraim Racker

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