Abstract

Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) cycling, that is, the Ca(2+) clock, entrained by externally delivered action potentials has been a major focus in ventricular myocyte research for the past 5 decades. In contrast, the focus of pacemaker cell research has largely been limited to membrane-delimited pacemaker mechanisms (membrane clock) driven by ion channels, as the immediate cause for excitation. Recent robust experimental evidence, based on confocal cell imaging, and supported by numerical modeling suggests a novel concept: the normal rhythmic heart beat is governed by the tight integration of both intracellular Ca(2+) and membrane clocks. In pacemaker cells the intracellular Ca(2+) clock is manifested by spontaneous, rhythmic submembrane local Ca(2+) releases from SR, which are tightly controlled by a high degree of basal and reserve PKA-dependent protein phosphorylation. The Ca(2+) releases rhythmically activate Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange inward currents that ignite action potentials, whose shape and ion fluxes are tuned by the membrane clock which, in turn, sustains operation of the intracellular Ca(2+) clock. The idea that spontaneous SR Ca(2+) releases initiate and regulate normal automaticity provides the key that reunites pacemaker and ventricular cell research, thus evolving a general theory of the initiation and strength of the heartbeat.

Full Text
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