Abstract

Substrate stiffness is crucial for diverse cell functions, but the mechanisms conferring cells with mechanosensitivity are still elusive. By tailoring substrate stiffness with 10-fold difference, we showed that L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channel current density was greater in chick ventricular myocytes cultured on the stiff substrate than on the soft substrate. Blockage of the BK channel increased the Ca2+ current density on the soft substrate and consequently eliminated substrate stiffness regulation of the Ca2+ channel. The expression of the BK channel, including the STREX-containing α-subunit that forms stretch-activated BK channel in myocytes and the BK channel function in myocytes (and also in HEK293 cells heterologously expressing STREX-containing α- and β1-subunits) was reduced in cells cultured on the stiff substrate. Furthermore, in HEK293 cells coexpressing the cardiac CaV1.2 channel and STREX-containing BK channel, the Ca2+ current density was greater in cells on the stiff substrate, which was not observed in cells expressing the CaV1.2 channel alone or coexpressing with the STREX-deleted BK channel. These results provide strong evidence to show that the stretch-activated BK channel plays a key role in functional regulation of cardiac voltage-gated Ca2+ channel by substrate stiffness, revealing, to our knowledge, a novel mechanosensing mechanism in ventricular myocytes.

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