Abstract

We investigated whether hypothermia and hyperthermia can alter the efficacy and potency of histamine at increasing the force of cardiac contractions in mice that overexpress the human H2 receptor only in their cardiac myocytes (labelled H2-TG). Contractile studies were performed in an organ bath on isolated, electrically driven (1Hz) left atrial preparations and spontaneously beating right atrial preparations from H2-TG mice and wild-type (WT) littermate control mice. The basal beating rate in the right atrial preparations from H2-TG mice was lowered by hypothermia (23°C) and elevated by hyperthermia (42°C). Furthermore, the efficacy of histamine (0.01-100µM) at exerting positive inotropic effects was more severely attenuated in the left and right H2-TG mouse atria under hypothermia and hyperthermia than under normothermia (37°C). Similarly, the inotropic response to histamine was attenuated under hypothermia and hyperthermia in isolated electrically stimulated (1Hz) right atrial preparations obtained from humans undergoing cardiac surgery. The phosphorylation state of phospholamban at serine 16 at 23°C was inferior to that at 37°C in left atrial preparations from H2-TG mice in the presence of 10µM histamine. In contrast, in human atrial preparations, the phosphorylation state of phospholamban at serine 16 in the presence of 100µM histamine was lower at 42°C than at 37°C. Finally, under hyperthermia, we recorded more and longer lasting arrhythmias in right atrial preparations from H2-TG mice than in those from WT mice. We conclude that the inotropic effects of histamine in H2-TG mice and in human atrial preparations, as well as the chronotropic effects of histamine in H2-TG mice, are temperature dependent. Furthermore, we observed that, even without stimulation of the H2 receptors by exogenous agonists, temperature elevation can increase arrhythmias in isolated right atrial preparations from H2-TG mice. We propose that H2 receptors play a role in hyperthermia-induced supraventricular arrhythmias in human patients.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call