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Department of Pharmacology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4H7
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ABSTRACT |
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A role for Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent kinase (CamK) in regulation of the voltage-sensitive release mechanism (VSRM) was investigated in guinea pig ventricular myocytes. Voltage clamp was used to separate the VSRM from Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR). VSRM contractions and Ca2+ transients were absent in cells dialyzed with standard pipette solution but present when 2-5 µM calmodulin was included. Effects of calmodulin were blocked by KN-62 (CamK inhibitor), but not H-89, a protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitor. Ca2+ current and caffeine contractures were not affected by calmodulin. Transient-voltage relations were bell-shaped without calmodulin, but they were sigmoidal and typical of the VSRM with calmodulin. Contractions with calmodulin exhibited inactivation typical of the VSRM. These contractions were inhibited by rapid application of 200 µM of tetracaine, but not 100 µM of Cd2+, whereas CICR was inhibited by Cd2+ but not tetracaine. In undialyzed myocytes (high-resistance microelectrodes), KN-62 or H-89 each reduced amplitudes of VSRM contractions by ~50%, but together they decreased VSRM contractions by 93%. Thus VSRM is facilitated by CamK or PKA, and both pathways regulate the VSRM in undialyzed cells.
excitation-contraction coupling; cardiac muscle; protein kinase
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE CONTRACTION of a mammalian heart is initiated by a rapid rise in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration, which is achieved primarily through release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) (2). Two mechanisms can release SR Ca2+ in cardiac muscle. Ca2+ entering the cardiac cell across the sarcolemma can bind to SR Ca2+ release channels (ryanodine receptors; RyRs) and cause them to open and release SR Ca2+ stores by a process called Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) (7). CICR can be initiated by Ca2+ entering through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (1, 3, 5, 6, 21), reverse-mode Na+/Ca2+ exchange (Na/CaEX ) (16, 18, 19, 25, 33, 34), or possibly Na+ channels when their selectivity for Na+ relative to Ca2+ has been altered pharmacologically (28). Recently, we have presented evidence that the release of SR Ca2+ also can be initiated by a voltage-sensitive release mechanism (VSRM), which operates independently of L-type Ca2+ current (ICa-L), T-type Ca2+ current, or reverse-mode Na/CaEX (9-11, 14, 15, 22).
CICR and the VSRM have distinctly different characteristics. The VSRM is selectively inhibited by ryanodine and by tetracaine at concentrations that do not inhibit ICa-L or by CICR coupled to ICa-L (22, 23). Similarly, ICa-L and the contractions triggered by ICa-L are inhibited by verapamil, nifedipine, or Cd2+ at concentrations that do not block the VSRM (9-11, 14, 15, 22). The VSRM also is insensitive to Na+ channel blockade with tetrodotoxin (TTX) or lidocaine (9-11, 14, 15, 22), and functions in the absence of Na+ in the extracellular medium (9) and in cells dialyzed with 0 mM Na+ (10, 11, 13). Furthermore, the VSRM exhibits voltage-dependent activation and inactivation properties that are distinctly different from those of ICa-L and Na/CaEX (9-11, 14, 15, 22).
The amplitudes of contractions initiated by the VSRM are not proportional to Ca2+ current but instead show a sigmoidal dependence on membrane depolarization (9-11, 14, 15, 22). This dependence on membrane depolarization implies the existence of voltage sensors located in the sarcolemma. It is not yet known whether activation of voltage sensors in cardiac muscle is communicated to RyRs physically through connections between these two proteins or by some intermediate signal such as phosphorylation.
Cardiac RyRs have phosphorylation sites for cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) and for Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CamK) (12, 20, 31). It is possible that the VSRM requires phosphorylation by one or both of these pathways, but that dialysis with patch pipettes reduces the intracellular concentrations of diffusible intermediates required for phosphorylation. Indeed, VSRM contractions are inhibited in voltage-clamp experiments conducted with patch pipettes in the whole cell configuration (11, 14). However, we have demonstrated that contractions (11, 14) and Ca2+ transients (10, 13) with activation and inactivation characteristics of the VSRM can be elicited with patch pipettes when 50 µM cAMP is added to the pipette solutions. Furthermore, the ability of cAMP to restore availability of the VSRM is abolished by H-89 (11), a specific inhibitor of PKA (4). These observations suggest that phosphorylation by PKA can increase the availability of the VSRM for activation.
It is not known whether CamK also may modulate availability of the VSRM, or whether phosphorylation by either or both pathways regulates activation of the VSRM in intact, undialyzed cardiac myocytes. Therefore, the objectives of the present study were to determine the following: 1) whether phosphorylation by CamK facilitates activation of the VSRM; 2) if voltage clamp with patch pipettes disrupts phosphorylation of the VSRM by CamK; and 3) whether the PKA and/or CamK phosphorylation paths are essential for activation of the VSRM in undialyzed ventricular myocytes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell isolation. Studies were conducted within the guidelines published by the Canadian Council on Animal Care and approved by the Dalhousie University Committee on Animal Care. Methods for cell isolation have been published previously (9).
Male (~90%) and female Charles River guinea pigs (250-350 g) were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (80 mg/kg ip). Hearts were removed and perfused retrogradely through the aorta (10-12 ml/min) at 37°C with use of oxygenated Ca2+-free solution of one of two compositions (in mM): solution 1) 120 NaCl, 3.8 KCl, 1.2 KH2PO4, 1.2 MgSO4, 10 HEPES, 11 glucose (pH 7.4 with NaOH, bubbled with 100% O2), or solution 2) 120 NaCl, 4 KCl, 4 NaH2PO4, 22 NaHCO3, 5.5 glucose, 1 MgSO4 (bubbled with 95% O2-5% CO2). Myocytes were disaggregated enzymatically with BMC collagenase A (Boehringer Mannheim) and protease (type 14, Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in combination with solution 1, whereas collagenase 1A (Sigma) and protease type 14 were used with solution 2. After 5-12 min of exposure to enzymes, the ventricles were minced and stored in a high K+ solution of the following composition (in mM): 80 KOH, 50 glutamic acid, 30 KCl, 30 KH2PO4, 20 taurine, 10 HEPES, 10 glucose, 3 MgSO4, 0.5 EGTA (pH 7.4 with KOH). For experimentation, isolated myocytes were transferred to an experimental chamber on an inverted microscope and superfused at 3 ml/min with oxygenated (100% O2) heated (37°C) solution containing (in mM) 45 NaCl, 100 choline Cl, 2 CaCl2, 4 KCl, 1 MgCl2, 10 glucose, 10 HEPES (pH 7.4 with NaOH), and 250 µM lidocaine or 250 µM lidocaine + 50 µM TTX to block Na+ current.Experimental methods.
Continuous whole cell voltage-clamp recordings were made with 1-3
M
fire-polished patch pipettes (A-M Systems, Everett, WA) coupled to
an Axopatch 200A amplifier with CV202A head stage (Axon Instruments,
Foster City, CA). Patch pipettes contained (in mM) 70 KCl, 70 K
aspartate, 4 MgATP, 1 MgCl2, 2.5 KH2PO4, 0.12 CaCl 2, 0.5 EGTA, 10 HEPES, pH 7.2 with KOH, with or without 2-5 µM bovine brain
calmodulin, or 50 µM 8-bromo-cAMP. Na+ was omitted from
the pipette solution to inhibit Na/CaEX. Liquid junction
potentials were compensated before data acquisition. In other
experiments, recordings were made with high-resistance microelectrodes
(16-25 M
, filled with 2.7 M KCl) and switch clamp (sample rate
7-12 kHz) with an Axoclamp 2A voltage-clamp amplifier (Axon
Instruments). pCLAMP 6 software (Axon Instruments) was used for data
acquisition and measurement. Unloaded cell shortening was measured with
a video edge detector (120 Hz sampling, Crescent Electronics, Sandy,
UT) (9). Current, voltage, and contractions were digitized
with a Labmaster A/D interface at sample rates up to 50 kHz
(TL1-125, Axon Instruments) and stored on a computer. Activation
steps were preceded by 10 conditioning pulses from a holding potential
of
80 to 0 mV, to maintain Ca2+ stores, followed by
repolarization to a postconditioning potential (VPC). In some experiments, a computer-triggered
device was used to change solutions bathing a single cell within 300 ms
at 37°C (11, 13, 22). This device permitted rapid
application of drugs, after conditioning pulses but before activation
steps, to minimize changes on SR loading.
Sources of drugs and chemicals. Ryanodine, H-89, and KN-62 were purchased from Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA), pentobarbital sodium from MTC Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge, Ontario), fura2-AM and DMSO from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR), and TTX from Alomone Labs (Jerusalem, Israel). All other chemicals were purchased from Sigma Chemical. All drugs were dissolved in deionized water. Kinase inhibitors H-89 and KN-62 were added to the pipette solution or to the superfusate as indicated. Fura 2-AM was dissolved in DMSO and diluted in physiological solution.
Data analyses. Ionic currents, voltage, and contraction were measured with pCLAMP 6 software. Peak inward currents were measured as the difference between maximum inward (downward) deflection of the current trace and a reference point at the end of the depolarizing step (usually 200 ms). Potassium currents were not blocked in the present study because previous reports have indicated that some potassium channel blocking agents (e.g., Cs+) alter excitation contraction-coupling substantially (17, 34). Amplitudes of contractions were measured as the difference between maximum cell shortening and a point immediately before the onset of cell shortening. For protocols in which two contractions were initiated by two sequential activation steps, the amplitude of the second contraction was measured with respect to a point immediately before onset of the second phasic contraction. Significance of differences between population means was tested with a Student's t-test or one-way ANOVA with a Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons. Differences between current-voltage or contraction-voltage relationships were analyzed with a two-way repeated measures analysis of variance. Post hoc comparisons were made with a Bonferroni test. Statistical analyses were performed by using Sigma Stat 1.02 (Jandel) or SAS 5.0 (SAS Institute) software. Measured data are presented as means ± SE. The number of replicates (n) is equal to the number of myocytes from which data were collected; no more than two replicates (myocytes) were collected from the same heart.
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RESULTS |
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To investigate a possible role for CamK in activation of the VSRM,
cell shortening, and transmembrane currents were recorded from isolated
guinea pig ventricular myocytes at 37°C. We have previously shown
that VSRM and CICR contractions can be activated separately with
sequential test steps to
40 and 0 mV, respectively, in undialyzed
myocytes or myocytes dialyzed with cAMP (9-11, 15, 22). The same protocol was used in the present study (Fig.
1A). When myocytes were
dialyzed with patch pipettes containing a standard intracellular
solution without cAMP, the activation step to
40 mV did not elicit a
VSRM contraction (Fig. 1B). However, the step from
40 to 0 mV elicited a phasic contraction coupled to Ca2+ entry
through ICa-L (9-11, 15, 22).
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CamK is activated by Ca2+ and by calmodulin. Under
the conditions used in the experiments illustrated by Fig.
1B, Ca2+ is provided by
ICa-L. However, it is possible that dialysis
decreases intracellular calmodulin concentration below levels needed
for activation of the VSRM. Therefore, we tested the effects of adding calmodulin to the intracellular pipette solution. Figure 1C
shows that addition of 2 µM calmodulin to the pipette solution
resulted in initiation of a prominent VSRM contraction by the test step to
40 mV. To determine whether this effect of calmodulin was mediated
through activation of CamK, similar experiments were conducted with
pipette solution containing calmodulin and 5 µM KN-62, a specific
blocker of CamK (32). Under these conditions, the step to
40 mV no longer activated the VSRM (Fig. 1D), however, the
step to 0 mV still elicited ICa-L and a phasic contraction.
Figure 2A shows mean data for
amplitudes of contractions and currents in experiments with and without
calmodulin added to the pipette solutions. VSRM contractions were
virtually absent with the step to
40 mV in myocytes without
calmodulin in the pipette, but increased significantly when calmodulin
was present. Furthermore, KN-62 dramatically reduced the mean
amplitudes of VSRM contractions to levels similar to those in the
absence of calmodulin. Figure 2A also shows that the effects
of KN-62 were specific. KN-62 did not prevent activation of the VSRM by
cAMP, and conversely H-89, a specific inhibitor of PKA
(4), did not prevent activation of the VSRM with
calmodulin. Minimal inward current was observed with the step to
40
mV with all combinations of kinase activators and inhibitors (Fig.
2B). In contrast to VSRM contractions, contractions
initiated by ICa-L were present in the absence
of calmodulin in the pipette solution (Fig. 2A). Addition of
calmodulin to the pipette solution caused a modest but significant
increase in the mean amplitude of
ICa-L-induced contractions elicited
by the step to 0 mV. This effect was reversed by KN-62 but not H-89.
Effects of calmodulin with and without KN-62 or H-89 on the amplitude
of ICa-L initiated by the step to 0 mV
approximately paralleled effects on the corresponding contraction
initiated by this step (Fig. 2B).
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To determine whether calmodulin facilitated the VSRM by increasing SR
Ca2+, we assessed SR Ca2+ content in control
and calmodulin-treated myocytes with caffeine. First, the amplitudes of
VSRM and CICR contractions were assessed with the same voltage-clamp
protocol shown in Fig. 1. Then the protocol was repeated, except that a
single rapid application of 10 mM caffeine was substituted for the
activation steps to
40 and 0 mV (Fig.
3A). The peak magnitudes of
contractures induced by application of caffeine were used as a measure
of SR Ca2+ load (2, 26). Figure 3B
(top) shows a representative recording of a caffeine
contracture induced in a myocyte dialyzed without calmodulin in the
pipette. Figure 3B (bottom) shows that caffeine induced a contracture with a similar magnitude in a myocyte studied with a patch pipette containing 2 µM calmodulin. Figure 3C
illustrates mean data for peak amplitudes of caffeine contractures and
for amplitudes of VSRM and CICR contractions measured in the same myocytes. Again, VSRM contractions were virtually absent without calmodulin but were present with calmodulin. However, there was no
significant difference in the mean amplitudes of caffeine contractures elicited in myocytes dialyzed with and without calmodulin. These data
indicate that addition of calmodulin to the patch pipette did not
affect SR Ca2+ significantly. Figure 3D shows
that addition of calmodulin to the patch pipette also had no effect on
inward currents initiated by the test steps in these experiments.
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To confirm that contractions elicited by steps to
40 mV in the
presence of calmodulin represent facilitation of Ca2+
release rather than an increase in myofilament Ca2+
sensitivity, we measured Ca2+ transients in cells loaded
with fura 2. Ca2+ transients initiated by sequential steps
to
40 and 0 mV were measured in cells with or without 5 µM
calmodulin in the patch pipettes (Fig.
4). Figure 4A shows
representative recordings of currents and transients in the absence of
calmodulin. The step to
40 mV initiated little change in fluorescence
ratio; however, the step to 0 mV was accompanied by a rapidly rising
Ca2+ transient. In contrast, in experiments in which
calmodulin was added to the pipette solution, both steps initiated
Ca2+ transients (Fig. 4B). Mean data for
Ca2+ transients and currents are presented in Fig.
4C. In the absence of calmodulin, Ca2+
transients were essentially absent with steps to
40 mV but were present with the step to 0 mV. However, in the presence of calmodulin, steps to
40 and 0 mV initiated transients of similar magnitudes. Calmodulin had no effect on inward currents.
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If Ca2+ transients and contractions that appeared when
calmodulin was included in the pipette solution were caused by the
VSRM, they should exhibit characteristics described for VSRM
contractions in undialyzed myocytes. The voltage dependence of CICR is
bell-shaped, whereas the voltage dependence of the VSRM is sigmoidal.
Therefore, we compared the voltage dependence of Ca2+
transients in the presence and absence of calmodulin, by applying test
steps to different membrane potentials after a train of 10 conditioning
potentials (Fig. 5, top).
Figure 5A shows representative recordings of inward currents
and Ca2+ transients initiated by three different voltage
steps in the absence of calmodulin. A step to
40 mV initiated little
if any inward current or Ca2+ transient. However, a step to
0 mV initiated inward Ca2+ current, which was accompanied
by a rapidly rising Ca2+ transient. In the absence of
calmodulin, both the inward current and the amplitude of the
Ca2+ transient decreased markedly when the test step was
increased to +60 mV. When 3 µM calmodulin was included in the patch
pipette, similar changes in current magnitude were seen with steps to
the same potentials (Fig. 5B). However, in the presence of
calmodulin the Ca2+ transients no longer followed the
voltage dependence of Ca2+ current. A large transient was
observed with the test step to
40 mV and 0 mV and was still present
with the step to +60 mV (Fig. 5B). Mean data showing the
voltage dependence of transients are shown in Fig. 5C. In
the absence of calmodulin, Ca2+ transients showed a
bell-shaped voltage dependence typical of CICR. Inclusion of calmodulin
in the pipette solution caused an increase in the amplitude of the
Ca2+ transients, and the voltage dependence became clearly
sigmoidal. Calmodulin had no effect on the amplitudes or bell-shaped
voltage dependence of inward Ca2+ current (Fig.
5D).
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The VSRM also can be differentiated from other mechanisms of
excitation-contraction coupling by its pharmacological characteristics. Therefore, we determined the effects of Cd2+, TTX, and
tetracaine on contractions initiated by sequential steps to
40 and 0 mV. Figure 6A shows
contractions and currents elicited in a myocyte voltage clamped with a
patch pipette containing 2 µM calmodulin. Lidocaine was present
throughout the experiment. Figure 6B shows currents
and contractions recorded after a rapid switch to extracellular
solution containing 100 µM of Cd2+ + 50 µM of TTX,
3 s before the test steps. The phasic contraction initiated by the
step to
40 mV remained. However, the inward current and contraction
triggered by the step to 0 mV were virtually abolished. Switches to
Cd2+ and TTX also inhibited L-current and contraction with
the step to 0 mV when the step from
40 to 0 mV was omitted to control for any effects of sequence of activation (not illustrated). Figure 6C presents mean data demonstrating that exposure to
Cd2+ in the presence of TTX strongly inhibited
ICa-L and contractions initiated by the step to
0 mV, but Cd2+ did not significantly affect the mean
amplitude of VSRM contractions or the small inward current initiated by
the step to
40 mV. Thus VSRM contractions elicited in the presence of
calmodulin were independent of CICR coupled to
ICa-L or Na+ current. It
also is highly unlikely that the VSRM contraction was triggered by
Na/CaEX, because the pipette contained 0 mM Na to inhibit
reverse Na/CaEX.
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The VSRM is selectively inhibited by 200 µM tetracaine in undialyzed
myocytes (22). Figure 7,
A and B, shows contractions and currents elicited
in a representative experiment with a patch pipette containing
calmodulin. Tetracaine (200 µM) and TTX (50 µM) were applied with
the rapid switching device 3 s before and during the test steps.
Tetracaine abolished the VSRM contraction elicited by the step to
40
mV, but had little or no effect on the contraction and current
initiated by the step to 0 mV. Figure 7C shows mean data
indicating that tetracaine significantly inhibited VSRM contractions by
~75% but did not affect ICa-L or contractions accompanying activation of ICa-L. Thus VSRM and
ICa-L contractions in myocytes dialyzed with
calmodulin exhibited the same differential blockade with tetracaine and
Cd2+, respectively, as documented previously in undialyzed
myocytes (21).
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Phasic VSRM contractions also can be identified by their steady-state
inactivation characteristics (10, 11, 15). We determined
the voltage dependence of inactivation for contractions supported by
calmodulin with a voltage protocol in which a step to
40 mV, to
activate the VSRM, was preceded by conditioning steps to different
potentials (VPC) (Fig.
8A). A switch to 100 µM
Cd2+ and 50 µM TTX was made 3 s before each test
step to
40 mV. Representative recordings of currents and contractions
preceded by different VPC are shown in Fig.
8B. Inward current was absent for all test steps.
Contraction was absent when the VPC was
30 mV,
but it appeared and became larger with more negative
VPC. Figure 8, C and D,
respectively, shows mean contractions, normalized to maximum contraction, as a function of VPC in the
presence of calmodulin and in the presence of calmodulin and H-89, to
eliminate any role for PKA. The lines are Boltzmann functions fitted to
the data. VSRM contractions were completely unavailable at
VPC more positive than
40 mV and fully
available near
70 mV. In the presence of calmodulin alone,
half-inactivation voltage (V1/2) was
55.9 mV and k was 3.9 mV. The relationship determined in the
presence of 5 µM H-89 was identical (V1/2 = 56.2 mV, k = 4.3 mV). These steady-state inactivation
parameters are similar to those for VSRM contractions in undialyzed
myocytes (15) and myocytes dialyzed with cAMP
(11).
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The VSRM is readily available for activation in myocytes voltage
clamped with high-resistance microelectrodes, without addition of
exogenous agents to activate the adenylyl cyclase-PKA or CamK phosphorylation pathways (9, 14, 15, 22). To determine whether phosphorylation via one or both of these pathways also is
essential for the availability of the VSRM in undialyzed myocytes, we
examined the effects of adding H-89 and KN-62 in experiments with
high-resistance microelectrodes to minimize intracellular dialysis. The
top panels in Fig. 9 show recordings of
currents and contractions elicited by sequential activation steps to
40 and 0 mV before addition of kinase inhibitors. In all three
examples, the step to
40 elicited a phasic VSRM contraction, and the
step to 0 mV activated a contraction coupled to
ICa-L. The bottom panels of Fig. 9, A
and B, respectively, show that exposure of myocytes either
to H-89 or KN-62 individually, reduced the amplitudes but did not
prevent activation of VSRM contractions. ICa-L
contractions also were reduced in amplitude. Corresponding mean effects
of H-89 and of KN-62 on contractions and currents are shown in Fig. 10, A and B. Each
kinase inhibitor, used alone, significantly decreased mean amplitudes
of both VSRM and ICa-L contractions to
approximately half of control. Neither inhibitor affected the small
inward current seen with the step to
40 mV. However, H-89 and KN-62
each modestly but significantly decreased ICa-L.
Continued availability of the VSRM in the presence of either H-89 or
KN-62 could be explained if both PKA and CamK phosphorylate the VSRM in
intact cells, and if phosphorylation by either path alone is sufficient
to allow activation. Therefore, we examined the effects of H-89 and
KN-62 in combination. Figure 9C shows a representative
example; mean data are shown at 10°C. Simultaneous exposure of
myocytes to both kinase inhibitors, virtually abolished the VSRM
contraction (7% of control remaining). Contractions triggered by
ICa-L also were significantly reduced in
amplitude, but only to ~34% of control amplitude. The combination of
kinases did not significantly affect the small inward current observed
with the step to
40 mV, but significantly decreased the mean
amplitude of ICa-L to ~44% of control.
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DISCUSSION |
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Our observations suggest that activation of the VSRM is facilitated by the CamK and adenylyl cyclase-PKA phosphorylation pathways in cardiac ventricular myocytes. Both paths appear to contribute significantly to the availability of the VSRM in undialyzed myocytes, because inhibition of either path significantly reduced the amplitudes of VSRM contractions, and simultaneous inhibition of both pathways essentially abolished VSRM contractions. Also, activation of the VSRM was inhibited when myocytes were voltage clamped with patch pipettes, but addition of either calmodulin or cAMP to the intracellular solution restored activation. These observations suggest that intracellular dialysis with patch pipettes must disrupt both pathways sufficiently to prevent activation of the VSRM. Clearly, in studies conducted with patch pipettes, it is important to consider that intracellular dialysis can disrupt regulatory pathways, which involve diffusible second messengers.
Effects of H-89 and KN-62 were very specific. In experiments with patch pipettes, H-89 did not inhibit calmodulin-supported contractions, and KN-62 did not prevent activation of contraction supported by cAMP. Thus in undialyzed myocytes, it is unlikely that the enhanced effect of simultaneous exposure to H-89 + KN-62 can be attributed to a simple increase in total inhibitor concentration. Therefore, the observation that each inhibitor by itself inhibited activation of the VSRM by about half indicates it is likely that both phosphorylation pathways regulate activation of the VSRM in undialyzed cells. H-89 and KN-62 in combination almost completely prevented activation of the VSRM in undialyzed myocytes. This suggests it is unlikely that phosphorylation pathways other than adenylyl cylase-PKA and CamK contribute significantly to the availability of the VSRM under basal conditions in intact myocytes.
Experiments in which Ca2+ transients were measured
demonstrate that the effects of calmodulin represent changes in
Ca2+ release. Thus the appearance of contractions at
40
mV cannot be attributed to a change in myofilaments sensitivity to
Ca2+ but represents activation of release of
Ca2+ at negative potentials. In addition, experiments with
fura 2 show that Ca2+ release was modified over a wide
range of membrane potentials. In the absence of calmodulin in the patch
pipette solution, Ca2+ transients followed a bell-shaped
voltage dependence, typical of CICR coupled to L-type Ca2+
current. However, inclusion of calmodulin in the pipette solution caused the voltage dependence to become clearly sigmoidal, as predicted
when the VSRM is activated (9-11, 14, 15, 22). Calmodulin also caused a marked increase in the magnitudes of Ca2+ transients initiated at all test potentials. Thus the
VSRM contributed substantially to initiation of SR Ca2+
release over its entire activation range.
Our experiments also demonstrate that the component of excitation-contraction coupling facilitated by calmodulin is most likely the same mechanism identified as the VSRM in undialyzed myocytes and cells dialyzed with cAMP, because it shares the same electrophysiological and pharmacological characteristics (9-11, 14, 15, 22). Calmodulin-supported VSRM contractions persisted when contractions triggered by Ca2+ influx via ICa-L were inhibited by Ca2+ channel blockade, but were selectively abolished by tetracaine, which inhibits the VSRM. The phasic VSRM contractions supported by calmodulin also showed steady-state inactivation relations virtually identical to those described for VSRM contractions in undialyzed guinea pig or rat ventricular myocytes (10, 15) and for myocytes dialyzed with cAMP (11). In all cases, the inactivation parameters were clearly different from those of L-type Ca2+ channels (15) and clearly different from Na/CaEX, which is not subject to steady-state inactivation nor inhibited by tetracaine (22, 27).
The effects of adding calmodulin to the patch pipette were different from those of cAMP. Calmodulin facilitated initiation of Ca2+ release and contraction without affecting the magnitude of ICa-L or the amplitudes of caffeine contractures. In contrast, the inclusion of 8-bromo-cAMP in patch pipettes increased the peak amplitude of ICa-L current (11). Furthermore, cAMP is known to stimulate SR Ca2+ uptake (2). These additional actions of cAMP have led to the suggestion that cAMP might result in a "hair trigger" for CICR by causing Ca2+ overload (28, 35). Under these conditions, a very small ICa-L at negative or positive potentials might initiate a large Ca2+ release and be mistaken as the VSRM (28, 35). However, this is not a tenable explanation, because CICR continued to be graded by the magnitude ICa-L in the presence of cAMP, and currents of similar magnitudes with and without cAMP in the pipette, induced contractions of similar amplitudes (11). In addition, the present study with calmodulin provides direct evidence that activation of the VSRM can occur without elevation of SR Ca2+ load or stimulation of ICa-L.
Phosphorylation of the VSRM by two separate pathways suggests that the contribution of the VSRM to cardiac contraction is highly regulated. The adenylyl cyclase-PKA and CamK pathways represent components of two different regulatory systems. The two regulatory pathways may not function in complete independence because cross talk occurs between the two, and regulatory agents may affect the two paths oppositely. For example, elevation of intracellular Ca2+ stimulates CamK, but inhibits most adenylyl cyclase isozymes which are active in cardiac tissues (30).
It is possible that changes in SR Ca2+ content, as well as Ca2+ release, might contribute to inhibition of VSRM contractions by when phosphorylation pathways are disrupted (12, 20, 24, 31). However, CICR coupled to ICa-L persisted at a basal level in the same myocytes in which intracellular dialysis without cAMP or calmodulin, or exposure to kinase inhibitors, abolished VSRM contractions. This observation is important because it indicates that SR stores of Ca2+ were still sufficient to allow CICR to initiate contraction. Furthermore, caffeine contractures were not significantly affected by dialysis with or without calmodulin. These observations indicate that the abolition of VSRM contractions cannot be explained by depletion of SR Ca2+ and must largely reflect the effects of phosphorylation on SR Ca2+ release.
The VSRM is remarkable in that either the CaM kinase or adenylyl cyclase and/or PKA phosphorylation pathways must be available in order for the VSRM to be activated significantly. In contrast, other mechanisms that are modulated by phosphorylation, such as ICa-L and CICR coupled to ICa-L, exhibit a basal level of activity after phosphorylation is inhibited. This raises the possibility that phosphorylation of the VSRM may not be simply regulatory in nature but actually might be an essential step linking depolarization to SR Ca2+ release. At least, these observations suggest fundamental differences in regulation of the VSRM and CICR. Additional investigation will be required to determine how regulation of these two mechanisms contributes to modulation of cardiac contraction.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors thank I. M. Redondo and C. Guyette for excellent technical assistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This study was supported in part by grants from the Medical Research Council of Canada and from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Nova Scotia.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. R. Ferrier, Dept. of Pharmacology, Sir Charles Tupper Medical Bldg., Dalhousie Univ., Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4H7 (E-mail: Gregory.Ferrier{at}dal.ca).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 29 July 1999; accepted in final form 16 May 2000.
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