Abstract

Sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA)2a overexpression and phospholamban depletion have been shown to have beneficial effects on contractility in heart failure. However, the high sympathetic tone during development of failure may interact with increases in SERCA2a activity in potentially deleterious ways. We used adenoviral vectors to overexpress SERCA2a or partially downregulate phospholamban in adult rabbit ventricular myocytes in culture and studied the responses of these cells to beta-adrenoceptor stimulation. SERCA2a overexpression and phospholamban depletion had quantitatively similar effects on basal contraction amplitude and in accelerating relaxation. Increasing SERCA2a activity by either strategy had little effect on the increase in contraction amplitude or incidence of arrhythmias with increasing isoproterenol. Maximum acceleration of relaxation by beta-adrenoceptor stimulation was similar to that produced by SERCA2a overexpression. Isoproterenol treatment of SERCA2a-overexpressing or phospholamban-deficient myocytes produced a further modest decrease in relaxation time, with similar final values in both groups. We find no evidence for Ca(2+) overload induced by SERCA2a overexpression alone or in combination with catecholamines.

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