Abstract

In cardiac muscle, junctin forms a quaternary protein complex with the ryanodine receptor (RyR), calsequestrin, and triadin 1 at the luminal face of the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (jSR). By binding directly the RyR and calsequestrin, junctin may mediate the Ca 2+-dependent regulatory interactions between both proteins. To gain more insight into the underlying mechanisms of impaired contractile relaxation in transgenic mice with cardiac-specific overexpression of junctin (TG), we studied cellular Ca 2+ handling in these mice. We found that the SR Ca 2+ load was reduced by 22% in cardiomyocytes from TG mice. Consistent with this, the frequency of Ca 2+ sparks was diminished by 32%. The decay of spontaneous Ca 2+ sparks was prolonged by 117% in TG. This finding was associated with a lower Na +-Ca 2+ exchanger (NCX) protein expression (by 67%) and a higher basal RyR phosphorylation at Ser 2809 (by 64%) in TG. The shortening- and Δ[Ca] i-frequency relationships (0.5–4 Hz) were flat in TG compared to wild-type (WT) which exhibited a positive staircase for both parameters. Furthermore, increasing stimulation frequencies hastened the time of relaxation and the decay of [Ca] i by a higher percentage in TG. We conclude that the impaired relaxation in TG may result from a reduced NCX expression and/or a higher SR Ca 2+ leak. The altered shortening-frequency relationship in TG seems to be a consequence of an impaired excitation–contraction coupling with depressed SR Ca 2+ release at higher rates of stimulation. Our data suggest that the more prominent frequency-dependent hastening of relaxation in TG results from a stimulation of SR Ca 2+ transport reflected by corresponding changes of [Ca] i.

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