Abstract

Key points Ca leak from the sarcoplasmic reticulum through the ryanodine receptor (RyR) reduces the amplitude of the Ca transient and slows its rate of decay.In the presence of β‐adrenergic stimulation, RyR‐mediated Ca leak produces a biphasic decay of the Ca transient with a fast early phase and a slow late phase.Two forms of Ca leak have been studied, Ca‐sensitising (induced by caffeine) and non‐sensitising (induced by ryanodine) and both induce biphasic decay of the Ca transient.Only Ca‐sensitising leak can be reversed by traditional RyR inhibitors such as tetracaine.Ca leak can also induce Ca waves. At low levels of leak, waves occur. As leak is increased, first biphasic decay and then slowed monophasic decay is seen. The level of leak has major effects on the shape of the Ca transient. In heart failure, a reduction in Ca transient amplitude and contractile dysfunction can by caused by Ca leak through the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca channel (ryanodine receptor, RyR) and/or decreased activity of the SR Ca ATPase (SERCA). We have characterised the effects of two forms of Ca leak (Ca‐sensitising and non‐sensitising) on calcium cycling and compared with those of SERCA inhibition. We measured [Ca2+]i with fluo‐3 in voltage‐clamped rat ventricular myocytes. Increasing SR leak with either caffeine (to sensitise the RyR to Ca activation) or ryanodine (non‐sensitising) had similar effects to SERCA inhibition: decreased systolic [Ca2+]i, increased diastolic [Ca2+]i and slowed decay. However, in the presence of isoproterenol, leak produced a biphasic decay of the Ca transient in the majority of cells while SERCA inhibition produced monophasic decay. Tetracaine reversed the effects of caffeine but not of ryanodine. When caffeine (1 mmol l−1) was added to a cell which displayed Ca waves, the wave frequency initially increased before waves disappeared and biphasic decay developed. Eventually (at higher caffeine concentrations), the biphasic decay was replaced by slow decay. We conclude that, in the presence of adrenergic stimulation, Ca leak can produce biphasic decay; the slow phase results from the leak opposing Ca uptake by SERCA. The degree of leak determines whether decay of Ca waves, biphasic or monophasic, occurs.

Highlights

  • Cardiac contraction is initiated by a transient increase in cytosolic Ca concentration (Ca transient) with most of this calcium released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) through the ryanodine receptor (RyR)

  • This paper investigates the effects of RyR-mediated Ca leak on Ca cycling

  • We studied the effects of two different forms of leak, Ca-sensitising and non-sensitising and found that, in the presence of β-adrenergic stimulation, both can induce biphasic decay of the Ca transient

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac contraction is initiated by a transient increase in cytosolic Ca concentration (Ca transient) with most of this calcium released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) through the ryanodine receptor (RyR) (see Bers, 2002 and Eisner et al 2013 for reviews). Two forms of Ca leak through the RyR have been described in heart failure: (1) Ca-sensitising leak that is caused by an increased sensitivity of the RyR to Ca and is characterised by frequent RyR openings (Kubalova et al 2005); and (2) a non-sensitising Ca leak where channel opening is independent of Ca levels on either side of the channel and is due to locking of the channel in a sub-conductance state (Marx et al 2000) It is not clear whether there are differences in the effects on Ca transient characteristics of these two forms of leak and how they compare to the effects of SERCA dysfunction. These observations provide a clear understanding of the mechanisms involved in the alterations in Ca handling caused by SR Ca leak

Methods
Results
10 Variance ratio
Ry 12 min
Discussion
Limitations
Conflict of interest
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