Abstract
OBJECTIVESThis study was designed to investigate the effects of cardiodepressant substances released from postischemic myocardial tissue on myocardial calcium-regulating pathways.BACKGROUNDWe have recently reported that new cardiodepressant substances are released from isolated hearts during reperfusion after myocardial ischemia.METHODSAfter 10 min of global ischemia, isolated rat hearts were reperfused, and the coronary effluent was collected for 30 s. We tested the effects of the postischemic coronary effluent on cell contraction, Ca2+transients and Ca2+currents of isolated rat cardiomyocytes by applying fluorescence microscopy and the whole-cell, voltage-clamp technique. Changes in intracellular phosphorylation mechanisms were studied by measuring tissue concentrations of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), as well as activities of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAMP-dPK) and protein kinase C (PKC).RESULTSThe postischemic coronary effluent, diluted with experimental buffer, caused a concentration-dependent reduction of cell shortening and Ca2+transient in the field-stimulated isolated cardiomyocytes of rats, as well as a reduction in peak L-type Ca2+current in voltage-clamped cardiomyocytes. The current reduction resulted from reduced maximal conductance—not from changes in voltage- and time-dependent gating of the L-type Ca2+channel. The postischemic coronary effluent modified neither the tissue concentrations of cAMP or cGMP nor the activities of cAMP-dPK and PKC. However, the effluent completely eliminated the activation of glycogen phosphorylase after beta-adrenergic stimulation.CONCLUSIONSNegative inotropic substances released from isolated postischemic hearts reduce Ca2+transient and cell contraction through cAMP-independent and cGMP-independent blockage of L-type Ca2+channels.
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