Abstract

Flash-frozen myocardium samples provide a valuable means of correlating clinical cardiomyopathies with abnormalities in sarcomeric contractile and biochemical parameters. We examined flash-frozen left-ventricle human cardiomyocyte bundles from healthy donors to determine control parameters for isometric tension ( P o) development and Ca 2+ sensitivity, while simultaneously measuring actomyosin ATPase activity in situ by a fluorimetric technique. P o was 17 kN m −2 and pCa 50% was 5.99 (28°C, I = 130 mM). ATPase activity increased linearly with tension to 132 μM s −1. To determine the influence of flash-freezing, we compared the same parameters in both glycerinated and flash-frozen porcine left-ventricle trabeculae. P o in glycerinated porcine myocardium was 25 kN m −2, and maximum ATPase activity was 183 μM s −1. In flash-frozen porcine myocardium, P o was 16 kN m −2 and maximum ATPase activity was 207 μM s −1. pCa 50% was 5.77 in the glycerinated and 5.83 in the flash-frozen sample. Both passive and active stiffness of flash-frozen porcine myocardium were lower than for glycerinated tissue and similar to the human samples. Although lower stiffness and isometric tension development may indicate flash-freezing impairment of axial force transmission, we cannot exclude variability between samples as the cause. ATPase activity and pCa 50% were unaffected by flash-freezing. The lower ATPase activity measured in human tissue suggests a slower actomyosin turnover by the contractile proteins.

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