|
|
||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1Centro de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares, Facultad de Ciencias Médicas, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina; 2Department of Genome Science, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; and 3Department of Pharmacology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
Submitted 3 January 2008 ; accepted in final form 15 August 2008
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
sarcoplasmic reticulum; calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase
Different laboratories, including our own, have shown that the mechanical recovery after an acid load is primarily dependent on CaMKII activity (14, 34, 36). In particular, the CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of Thr17 of phospholamban (PLN), the main regulatory protein of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2a (SERCA2a), appears to be important to offset the direct inhibitory effect of acidosis on SERCA2a and therefore of the recovery of relaxation and SR Ca2+ content during acidosis (14, 31, 34). During the course of these experiments in perfused rat hearts, we observed arrhythmic contractions that appeared after
15 min of acidosis in a few preparations but were evident in all preparations upon returning to normal pH. A similar pattern was described in isolated myocytes (36). Interestingly, the onset and removal of the acid stimulus have been associated to the spontaneous SR Ca2+ release in both nonstimulated and electrical-stimulated preparations (37). From these results it is reasonable to expect that the arrhythmias observed during acidosis and postacidosis are primarily triggered by a Ca2+-overloaded SR due to CaMKII activation and PLN phosphorylation. The present experiments were undertaken to test these hypotheses.
| METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Experiments were performed in Wistar male rats (200–300 g body wt) and in transgenic mice (25–30 g body wt) expressing four concatenated repeats of the CaMKII autocamitide inhibitory peptide (AIP) selectively in the SR membrane (SR-AIP). Age-matched wild-type (WT) mice served as controls. The mouse transgenic model was developed as previously described (21). Animals used in this study were maintained in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals [National Institutes of Health (NIH) Publication No. 85-23, Revised 1996]. The protocol was approved by the Ethic Committee of the Cardiovascular Research Center, National Research Council (CCT-La Plata Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, Argentina).
Intact Hearts
Heart perfusions. Isolated hearts were perfused according to Langendorff technique at constant temperature (37°C) and flow (14 and 4 ml/min for rat and mouse hearts, respectively). After ablation of the atrioventricular (AV) node, the heart rate was kept at 240 and 360 beats/min for rat and mouse hearts, respectively, unless otherwise stated. The physiological bicarbonate buffer solution (BBS) contained (in mM) 128.3 NaCl, 4.7 KCl, 1.35 CaCl2 (2.5 in mice), 20.2 NaHCO3, 0.4 NaH2PO4, 1.1 MgCl2, 11.1 glucose, and 0.04 Na2EDTA; this solution was equilibrated with 95% O2-5% CO2 to give a pH of 7.4 (control solution). Mechanical parameters were obtained by passing into the left ventricle a latex balloon connected to a pressure transducer. The balloon was filled with aqueous solution to achieve a left ventricular end-diastolic pressure of 6–12 mmHg (34). Monophasic APs (MAPs) were obtained by using a Ag/AgCl electrode apposed to the epicardial free left ventricular wall, using a direct current—coupled high—input impedance differential amplifier. The MAP electrode was gradually positioned with the help of a micromanipulator until a gentle but stable contact pressure was achieved (4, 25). Recordings were accepted for analysis if they had a stable baseline, a rapid upstroke with consistent amplitude, and a smooth contoured repolarization phase and if they remained stable throughout the stabilization period. In most of the experimental series, MAPs were recorded both in the absence and presence of a latex balloon, to allow for simultaneous mechanical measurements in the latter case.
Experimental protocol. After stabilization (control solution, pH 7.4), hearts were perfused with BBS equilibrated with 80% O2-20% CO2 (hypercapnic acidosis, pH 6.8) for 20 min and then returned to the control solution. Quantification of ectopic activity was accomplished by counting the number of beats occurring between triggered electrical activity during a period of 3 min (see RESULTS). A group of hearts was freeze clamped at different times during acidosis and at 1 and 3 min after the acidosis period, the time at which arrhythmias were more profuse, for biochemical assays. When drugs were used, they were perfused 10 min before the beginning of acidosis and throughout the acidosis and postacidosis periods, unless otherwise indicated. The concentration of DMSO used for the dilution of the drugs failed to affect the basal contractility and the pattern of ectopic activity. In some experiments, a defined pacing protocol with pauses test for spontaneous activity was performed to detect the possible appearance of DADs. After the usual protocol of stabilization and acidosis at 240 beats/min, the stimulation frequency was stopped to allow for spontaneous activity at the moment of returning to normal pH. The usual spontaneous rhythm of the hearts after AV node blockade was 70–80 beats/min. In some of these experiments, two electrodes were simultaneously apposed to the endocardial (septum) and the epicardial surface of the left ventricle.
SR membrane vesicles. SR membrane vesicles were prepared as previously described (16). Protein was measured by the method of Bradford using bovine serum albumin as the standard. The yield was 1 to 2 mg membrane vesicles protein/g tissue.
Electrophoresis and western blot analysis. For immunological detection of PLN and phosphorylated PLN, 15 µg of membrane protein were electrophoresed per gel lane in 10% acrylamide gels (34). For immunological detection of ryanodine receptor type 2 (RyR2) and phosphorylated RyR2, 50 µg of membrane protein were electrophoresed per gel lane in 6% acrylamide gels (16). Separated proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Immobilon-P, Millipore) and probed with the following antibodies: phospho- (p)Ser16-PLN (1:5,000), pThr17-PLN (1:5,000), and RyR2-pS2809 (1:5,000; Badrilla, Leeds, UK), and RyR2-pS2815 (1:1,000; kindly provided by X. Wehrens, Houston, TX), and RyR2 (1:2,500; Affinity Bioreagents). Immunoreactivity was visualized by peroxidase-conjugated antibodies using a peroxidase-based enhanced chemiluminescence detection kit (ECL, Amersham). The signal intensity of the bands was quantified using ImageJ (NIH). Phosphorylation of PLN was expressed as the percentage of the control values (previous to acidosis) and the absence of drugs. RyR2 phosphorylation was normalized by the total RyR2 content and expressed as the percentage of control.
Isolated Myocytes
Myocyte isolation. Rat myocytes were isolated by enzymatic digestion (38) and kept in a HEPES-buffered solution at room temperature (20–22°C) until used. Only rod-shaped myocytes with clear and distinct striations and an obvious marked shortening and relaxation on stimulation were used. Experiments were performed at room temperature.
Indo-1 fluorescence and cell shortening measurements. Myocytes were loaded with indo-1 AM (17 µM for 9 min) (38). Cells were placed on the stage of an inverted microscope (Nikon Diaphot 200) adapted for epifluorescence, continuously superfused with BBS (pH 7.4) at a constant flow of 1 ml/min, and field stimulated via two platinum electrodes on either side of the bath at 0.5 Hz. The ratio of the indo-1 emission (410 and 490 nm) was taken as an index of intracellular Ca2+. Resting cell length and cell shortening were measured by a video-based motion detector (Crescent electronics, UT). Indo-1-loaded myocytes were subjected to the protocol of hypercapnic acidosis and then returned to control pH, as described above. SR Ca2+ content and SR Ca2+ leak were assessed at different times during this protocol (see RESULTS). SR Ca2+ content was determined by rapidly switching from the BBS to one of the same pH, containing 25 mM caffeine to cause SR Ca2+ release. SR Ca2+ leak was studied according to Shannon et al. (45). In short, the method consists in measuring resting Ca2+ in the presence and absence of SR Ca2+ channel blockade by tetracaine. At selected times during the protocol, the stimulation was stopped and the myocytes were exposed to 0 Na+-0 Ca2+ solution for 60 s to block the NCX, so that little or no Ca2+ can enter or leave the resting cell, in the absence and presence of tetracaine to block the SR Ca2+ release channel. The difference in diastolic Ca2+ with and without tetracaine was taken as an estimation of SR Ca2+ leak.
All data (perfused hearts and isolated myocytes) were recorded on a hard disk at a sampling frequency of 1 kHz by using PowerLab data acquisition software and a personal computer.
Planar Lipid Bilayers
Isolation of cardiac SR microsomes from rat ventricle and single RyR2 channel recordings were carried out as previously described (7, 11). Briefly, cardiac SR microsomes were fused to phosholipid planar bilayers (5 phosphatidylethanolamine:4 phosphatidylserine:1 phosphatidylcholine parts, 50 mg/ml in decane), painted on a 100-µm hole separating two compartments: CIS or cytosolic (containing 250 mM HEPES/Tris-OH, pH 7.9) and TRANS or lumenal [250 mM HEPES/52 mM Ca(OH)2, pH 7.4]. In all experiments, the membrane potential equaled 0 mV. RyR2 openings are observed as upward deflections of
3.5 pA (Ca2+ flux: TRANS
CIS). Recordings were filtered at 1 kHz, digitized at 5 kHz with a Digidata 1360 (Axon Instruments), and analyzed using pClamp9 and SigmaPlot 9 (Systat Software, San Jose, CA).
The cytosolic pH was decreased in steps (from 7.9 to 6.6) by a cumulative addition of HEPES in two sets of experiments: 1) with 2 µM cytosolic-free [Ca2+], where RyR2 are moderately active; and 2) with 200 µM [Ca2+], where RyR2 are fully activated (11). Since we used the fairly pH-insensitive Ca2+ chelator Dibromo-BAPTA, only a minor adjustment was required at the most acidic pH. At each pH step, 4-min recordings were taken to estimate the individual open probability (Po). To test the reversibility of the effect of acidity on RyR2 bathed with 2 µM cytosolic-free [Ca2+], pH was changed from 6.6 back to 7.3 by an addition of Tris-OH. To roughly estimate the rate of recovery, Po samples were taken every 10 s before and after changing the pH.
Statistics. Data are expressed as means ± SE. Statistical significance was determined by Student's t-test for paired or unpaired observations as appropriate and by ANOVA when different groups were compared. The Newman-Keuls test was used to examine statistical differences observed with the ANOVA. A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Figure 1A shows typical records of the time course of left ventricular developed pressure during acidosis and after returning to normal pH. As already described, hypercapnic acidosis produced an impairment of contractility followed by a spontaneous recovery that occurred despite the persistent extracellular acidosis. Returning to normal pH triggers an arrhythmic pattern. Figure 1B is an enlarged view of left ventricular developed pressure and epicardial MAPs at different times during the protocol (a–d in Fig. 1A). MAP recordings indicated that the ectopic beats occur after the completion of the paced beats. Similar results were obtained in the absence of the intraventricular balloon to avoid possible irritations (Fig. 1C). Figure 1D shows the overall results of these experiments.
|
Role of CaMKII
Perfused rat hearts. To investigate the hypothesis that arrhythmias are favored by CaMKII activation during acidosis, the same protocol showed in Fig. 1 was followed in the presence of 1 µM of the CaMKII inhibitor KN-93 and of the inactive analog, KN-92 (Fig. 2, A and B). Whereas the mechanical recovery and the arrhythmic activity were greatly reduced in the presence of KN-93, both persisted in the presence of KN-92. Overall results are depicted in Fig. 2C.
|
Table 1 shows the lack of effect of the different kinase inhibitors on basal contractility, relaxation, and MAPs duration.
|
|
To study whether the arrhythmias observed depend on SR Ca2+ load and release, we used thapsigargin, to inhibit SR Ca2+ uptake and ryanodine or dantrolene, to inhibit SR Ca2+ release. Figure 4, A and B, depicts typical examples of the thapsigargin and ryanodine experiments. Both drugs produced a significant reduction in the occurrence of ectopic beats after removal of acidosis. Moreover, the mechanical recovery was virtually abolished in both cases (not shown). Similar results were obtained with dantrolene. The overall results of these experiments are shown in Fig. 4C.
|
Figure 5A shows the time course of the effect of hypercapnic acidosis on cell shortening in isolated myocytes and typical recordings of the caffeine-induced Ca2+ transient, as an estimation of total SR Ca2+ content, before acidosis (a), at the beginning (b), and at the end (c) of acidosis and after returning to normal pH (d). SR Ca2+ content increases after 1 min of acidosis, the moment during acidosis at which the Thr17 phosphorylation of PLN was maximal (Fig. 5B). The SR Ca2+ content then diminished but was still significantly higher than control by the end of the acidosis period and after acidosis (See Fig. 6). The records in Fig. 5A also showed that acidosis significantly slowed the caffeine Ca2+ transient decay. The overall results indicated that time to 50% decay of the caffeine Ca2+ transient significantly increased from 387 ± 56 (control) to 939 ± 308 ms (acidosis, P < 0.05) and returned to control values, 350 ± 35 ms, 1 min after the acidosis period. In agreement with previous findings, these results reflect the acidosis-induced inhibition of the NCX (47) and further show that this inhibition was fully reversible immediately after returning to a normal pH. Figure 5B shows typical immunoblots of the phosphorylation of CaMKII and Thr17 of PLN. Both phosphorylations increased at the beginning of acidosis, returning to basal levels after
10 min of acidosis. Phosphorylation of Thr17 of PLN was also studied after acidosis. Although it showed a trend to decrease, this decrease did not attain significant levels. Phosphorylation of Ser16 of PLN, the PKA site, did not change (data not shown). Figure 5C shows that CaMKII inhibition decreased both, the significant increase in Thr17 phosphorylation at the beginning of acidosis and the associated increase in SR Ca2+ content. Altogether these results indicate that the CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of Thr17 of PLN, although transient, is a major cause of the increase in SR Ca2+ load that occurs during acidosis, in line with previous findings from our and other laboratories (14, 31, 34, 36). Interestingly, additional experiments in perfused hearts in which KN-93 was administered during the acidosis period, immediately after the decay of Thr17 phosphorylation, failed to avoid the arrhythmic pattern: upon returning to control pH the number of ectopic beats recorded were 38 ± 7, a figure similar to that observed in the absence of drugs in the same time period (Fig. 1D).
|
|
To examine whether the return to normal pH produces a leak of Ca2+ from an overloaded SR, the SR Ca2+ leak was studied in isolated myocytes after the acidosis period. A second group of myocytes was studied under control conditions (myocytes not submitted to acidosis). This group was paced at the same rate as the group submitted to acidosis and for the same period as the acidotic period. A third group of myocytes was studied at the end of acidosis. In this group the extracellular Ca2+ was decreased to 0.5 mM to match a similar SR Ca2+ content as the one observed after acidosis. Figure 6A depicts the protocol used. Figure 6B shows the overall results of these experiments. The return to normal pH was associated with an increase in SR Ca2+ leak when compared with control (same pH and lower SR Ca2+ content) or with the end of acidosis period (lower pH and similar SR Ca2+ content). As expected, the increase in SR Ca2+ leak observed after acidosis significantly decreased toward control values when the acidosis period was induced in the presence of KN-93. Taken together, these results would indicate that the return to normal pH evokes the leak of Ca2+ from a Ca2+-overloaded SR. An increase in spontaneous SR Ca2+ release has been previously related to either PKA or CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of RyR2 at either Ser2809 or Ser2815 sites, respectively (12, 30). Figure 6C shows Western blots and the overall results indicating that no significant changes were observed in the phosphorylation of Ser2809 or Ser2815 of RyR2 either during acidosis or after returning to normal pH with respect to control values. Thus the increase in SR Ca2+ leak observed after returning to normal pH with respect to that observed during acidosis for a similar SR Ca2+ load may be attributed to a reversible inhibition of RyR2 by acidosis.
Acidosis Reversibly Inhibits RyR2
Although it is generally held that acidosis inhibits RyR2, there are some differences between reports testing the action of protons on RyR2 (44, 51). On the one hand, increasing/decreasing the pH around physiological levels (pH
7.2), respectively, activated/inhibited RyR2 (44). In another report, only the inhibition was found at pH < 7 (51). These discrepancies may reflect differences in experimental conditions, including levels of cytosolic free [Ca2+] (51). In Fig. 7, we then compared the effect of changing pH at the cytosolic surface of RyR2 bathed with 2 µM free cytosolic [Ca2+] (
EC50 for RyR2 activation) or with 200 µM (which fully activates the channels) (11).
|
2 µM), Po decreased at each step of acidification. The Hill equation, Po = Po0/{1 + ([H+]/IC50)N} was fitted to these data. Po0 (Po predicted in the absence of H+) was 0.65 ± 0.04, IC50 ([H+] that induces half-maximal inhibition) was 63 ± 7 nM (equivalent to pH
7.2), and N (minimum apparent number of H+ inhibitory sites in RyR2) was 2.0 ± 0. The inhibitory action of protons on RyR2 was readily reversed (within
30 s) by increasing the pH from 6.6 to 7.3 (Fig. 7C). When the RyR2 were bathed with saturating cytosolic-free [Ca2+], Po values did not decrease with acidity (Fig. 7B, open circles). The results suggest that protons decreased the affinity of the RyR2 activating cytosolic sites for Ca2+. CaMKII-Dependent DADs Can Be Detected After the Acidosis Period
The dependence of the arrhythmic pattern described on the SR Ca2+ release and SR Ca2+ content would suggest that arrhythmias may be triggered by DADs. We therefore followed a defined pacing protocol with pauses test for spontaneous activity to detect the possible appearance of DADs (see METHODS). Figure 8A shows MAPs recorded from the epicardial wall after this protocol. After termination of pacing at 240 beats/min and simultaneous return to normal pH, two membrane depolarizations were observed. Whereas the first was followed by two spontaneous beats, the second triggered an episode of ventricular arrhythmia. This behavior was observed in five of five experiments of this type and in zero of three experiments when KN-93 was present (Fig. 8B). When MAPs were recorded simultaneously from the endocardial and epicardial ventricular wall, the number of DADs detected from the endocardial wall was significantly lower than that detected from the epicardial surface (4 ± 2 vs. 15 ± 4, n = 5) in the three first minutes of normal pH after acidosis. Taken together, these experiments would indicate that the returning to normal pH evoked membrane depolarizations, suggestive of DADs, mainly detected from the epicardial surface of the ventricular wall, which are able to trigger arrhythmic episodes and are prevented by CaMKII inhibition.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Monophasic APs
MAPs are extracellularly recorded waveforms that are not identical to true transmembrane AP recordings. Nevertheless, they can accurately reproduce the time course of transmembrane APs and are suitable for studying the characteristics of local myocardial electrophysiology in intact animal preparations and in the clinical setting (5, 8, 13, 17, 33). Indeed, recording MAPs is the only possible method to explore localized myocardial activation and repolarization in the human heart or in the in vivo animal hearts. In the present experiments we used MAP recordings to assess the type of arrhythmia that takes place upon returning to a normal pH after acidosis. Although the application of this method has several practical problems such as MAPs instability or registration of artifacts, we were able to minimize the influence of these problems and to obtain stable MAP recordings that could be simultaneously assessed in the endocardial and epicardial ventricular walls and could be suppressed by different interventions.
Arrhythmias After Acidosis Are Suppressed by CaMKII Inhibition
The present results showed that the ectopic activity after acidosis was significantly decreased in transgenic animals with the inhibition of CaMKII targeted to the SR, compared with that in the age-matched WT mice. The arrhythmic pattern was also prevented by the CaMKII inhibitor, KN-93, but not by its inactive analog KN-92, in the perfused rat heart. The arrhythmias appeared to be triggered by membrane depolarizations, typical of DADs that were also blocked by KN-93. These results indicate that the triggered arrhythmias are dependent on a CaMKII phosphorylation, which would likely occur at the SR level. Since RyR2 were not significantly phosphorylated either during or after acidosis, these experiments support the notion of a major role of PLN phosphorylation, specifically the CaMKII site Thr17, in the increase in SR Ca2+ content that occurs at the beginning of acidosis. Recent evidence indicated that SR-AIP mice show a consistent decrease in CaMKII-dependent facilitation at the L-type Ca2+ channels level (40). However, acidosis either decreases or does not change the L-type Ca2+ current (20, 26), making a possible contribution of this current to the acidosis-induced increase in SR Ca2+ load unlikely. Moreover, if this contribution takes place, it would not fade the importance of Thr17 phosphorylation on this effect.
It has been previously shown that CaMKII inhibition reduces Ca2+ current facilitation, L-type Ca2+ channel opening probability, and EADs (2, 15, 49, 50). Taken together, these findings convincingly showed the link between EADs initiation, L-type Ca2+ current, and CaMKII activation. Moreover, a different type of evidence demonstrated that CaMKII may affect Na+ and K+ channels, which would be expected to modify AP duration (43, 48). We did not observe changes in AP duration after KN-93 administration (Table 1), which would preclude an effect of either the drug or of CaMKII on these channels under basal conditions.
DADs are not linked to ion-channel alterations but rather to conditions that favor SR Ca2+ overload (29). Earlier studies by Wu et al. (49) indicated that when artificially prolonged AP waves are used as voltage-clamp commands, cell membranes exhibit a transient-inward current that is blocked by the dialysis of a CaMKII inhibitory peptide. These results may suggest that Ca2+ influx during a prolonged AP is capable of overloading the SR with Ca2+, producing currents likely to be responsible for DADs (1). However, the potential role of CaMKII activity in DADs formation had never been directly tested. The present results indicate that the arrhythmias observed after acidosis are suppressed by CaMKII-inhibition and are likely triggered by DADs. In our experimental conditions, DADs primarily originated in the epicardium. This mechanism would constitute the main mechanism of triggered arrhythmias after a period of acidosis. In the context of these results, it is important to mention that although it has been previously thought that DADs originate mainly in the endocardium (28), recent work reported that DADs and the triggered activity associated with spontaneous SR Ca2+ release occurred preferentially near the epicardium in a model of abnormal RyR2 function induced by FKBP12.6 dissociation and β-adrenergic stimulation. The authors attributed the higher ectopy of the epicardium with respect to the endocardium to the faster SR Ca2+ uptake observed, possibly due to a higher expression of SERCA2a compared with that observed in the endocardium (22, 35).
Mechanism of SR Ca2+ Load During Acidosis
Previous experiments causally linked the spontaneous mechanical recovery that occurs during acidosis to an increase in SR Ca2+ load (18). Earlier evidence indicated that the signaling cascade involved in this increase was triggered by the activity of the Na+-H+ exchanger, enhanced by intracellular acidosis, which in turn would increase intracellular Na+ and intracellular Ca2+ by slowing the forward mode of the NCX and eventually reversing it. It was hypothesized that the increase in Ca2+ promoted by this pathway would be sufficient to overcome the direct inhibitory action of acidosis on the activity of SERCA2a (18, 39). More recent studies indicated, however, that this cascade of events, although possibly necessary, was not sufficient by itself to increase the Ca2+ content of the SR. It was shown that the activation of CaMKII and the phosphorylation of Thr17 of PLN were necessary events underlying the mechanical recovery (14, 34, 36). In line with these previous findings, the present experiments also show that acidosis produces an increase in SR Ca2+ load and a mechanical recovery, both of which were reduced by CaMKII inhibition, as it was the significant increase in the phosphorylation of Thr17 of PLN. The increase in the phosphorylation of Thr17 occurred at the beginning of acidosis associated to the maximal increase in SR Ca2+ content (Fig. 5). We are aware of the fact that the increase in SR Ca2+ content observed during acidosis is qualitative and may be distorted due to possible changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ buffering. However, the increase in SR Ca2+ content during acidosis has been validated by quantitative measurements of SR Ca2+ and Ca2+ buffering and from changes in NCX current on repolarization (10). The present findings add to these previous results the fact that the increase in SR Ca2+ content during acidosis is dependent of CaMKII, in agreement with previous findings in mice by DeSantiago et al. (14). Taken together, the results suggest that the activation of CaMKII seems to be a necessary step required to increase SR Ca2+ load, possibly through the phosphorylation of Thr17 of PLN (14, 34). In this scenario and relevant to the present study, it is important to rescue the role of the acidosis-induced inhibition of RyR2 and NCX in favoring SR Ca2+ overload under acidosis conditions (see below).
Why Is the Ectopic Activity More Closely Associated to the Return to Normal pH?
If the increase in SR Ca2+ content occurs during acidosis, the question is, then, Why are the arrhythmias more closely associated to the return to normal pH? The explanation to this finding may be given by experimental evidence showing the inhibitory effects of acidosis on RyR2 and on the frequency of Ca2+ spark (3, 10, 44, 46, 51). In agreement with these results, we showed that acidosis reversibly inhibits the RyR2 open probability in planar lipid bilayers at not saturating cytosolic Ca2+ levels (see Fig. 7). Moreover, the SR Ca2 leak observed after returning to normal pH was not only greater than control, possibly due to a significant increase in SR Ca2+ content, but also more important than the Ca2 leak observed at the end of acidosis, for a similar SR Ca2+ load. An increase in SR Ca2+ leak may also be favored by a CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of RyR2 (12, 30). However, our results did not detect any significant increase in the phosphorylation of either Ser2815 or Ser2809 sites, neither during the acidosis period nor after returning to normal pH. Thus returning to normal pH would increase the opening probability of the Ca2+ release channel of a Ca2+ overloaded SR. Returning to normal pH would also favor the reactivation of NCX inhibited by acidosis. In agreement with previous findings (47), the present experiments indeed showed that the rate of Ca2+ decline of caffeine transients was significantly slowed by acidosis, an effect that was fully reversible upon returning to normal pH. All these mechanisms, acting in concert, would be responsible for the increase in SR Ca2+ leak and triggered arrhythmias observed.
Figure 9 depicts the proposed mechanism for the arrhythmias triggered after a period of acidosis.
|
The present experiments indicated that the return to normal pH after a period of hypercapnic acidosis triggered an arrhythmic pattern that is dependent on CaMKII. Intracellular acidosis seems to be the important change, since metabolic acidosis produced a significant lower number of ectopic beats after returning to normal pH. Our findings may be of interest in the clinical setting, since substantial changes in intracellular pH may occur in different clinical disturbances of the acid /base status, like ischemia-reperfusion injury, the syndrome of sleep apnea/hypopnea (32), or in patients in dialysis (42), that may affect cardiac function. The present experiments suggest that alterations in intracellular pH associated with all these pathologies may be the substrate of at least part of the arrhythmias observed in these diseases.
CaMKII has emerged as an important arrhythmogenic signaling molecule in the setting of the LQT syndrome (49), cardiac hypertrophy (50), and cardiomyopathy (24). All these studies pointed to the crucial role of CaMKII in generating EADs and triggered arrhythmias. The present results strongly suggest that CaMKII is also responsible for DADs that trigger post-acidosis arrhythmias. As such, CaMKII may be an antiarrhythmic drug target during this type of arrhythmias.
| GRANTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
R. Becerra is a fellow from the Comisión de Investigaciones Científicas (Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina). M. Said, J. Palomeque, G. Rinaldi, C. Mundiña-Weilenmann, L. Vittone, and A. Mattiazzi are established Investigators of Consejo Nacional de Investgaciones de Científica y Technológica (CONICET, Argentina).
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
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.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. M. Sag, D. P. Wadsack, S. Khabbazzadeh, M. Abesser, C. Grefe, K. Neumann, M.-K. Opiela, J. Backs, E. N. Olson, J. H. Brown, et al. Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II Contributes to Cardiac Arrhythmogenesis in Heart Failure Circ Heart Fail, November 1, 2009; 2(6): 664 - 675. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |