Abstract

Focal mechanical stimulation of single neonatal mouse cardiac myocytes in culture induced intercellular Ca(2+) waves that propagated with mean velocities of approximately 14 micrometer/s, reaching approximately 80% of the cells in the field. Deletion of connexin43 (Cx43), the main cardiac gap junction channel protein, did not prevent communication of mechanically induced Ca(2+) waves, although the velocity and number of cells communicated by the Ca(2+) signal were significantly reduced. Similar effects were observed in wild-type cardiac myocytes treated with heptanol, a gap junction channel blocker. Fewer cells were involved in intercellular Ca(2+) signaling in both wild-type and Cx43-null cultures in the presence of suramin, a P(2)-receptor blocker; blockage was more effective in Cx43-null than in wild-type cells. Thus gap junction channels provide the main pathway for communication of slow intercellular Ca(2+) signals in wild-type neonatal mouse cardiac myocytes. Activation of P(2)-receptors induced by ATP release contributes a secondary, extracellular pathway for transmission of Ca(2+) signals. The importance of such ATP-mediated Ca(2+) signaling would be expected to be enhanced under ischemic conditions, when release of ATP is increased and gap junction channels conductance is significantly reduced.

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