Signal Transduction and Ca2+ Signaling in Intact Myocardium
[摘要] References(116)Cited-By(32)The experimental procedures to simultaneously detect contractile activity and Ca2+ transients by means of the Ca2+ sensitive bioluminescent protein aequorin in multicellular preparations, and the fluorescent dye indo-1 in single myocytes, provide powerful tools to differentiate the regulatory mechanisms of intrinsic and external inotropic interventions in intact cardiac muscle. The regulatory process of cardiac excitation-contraction coupling is classified into three categories; upstream (Ca2+ mobilization), central (Ca2+ binding to troponin C), and/or downstream (thin filament regulation of troponin C property or crossbridge cycling and crossbridge cycling activity itself) mechanisms. While a marked increase in contractile activity by the Frank-Starling mechanism is associated with only a small alteration in Ca2+ transients (downstream mechanism), the force-frequency relationship is primarily due to a frequency-dependent increase of Ca2+ transients (upstream mechanism) in mammalian ventricular myocardium. The characteristics of regulation induced by β- and α-adrenoceptor stimulation are very different between the two mechanisms: the former is associated with a pronounced facilitation of an upstream mechanism, whereas the latter is primarily due to modulation of central and/or downstream mechanisms. α-Adrenoceptor-mediated contractile regulation is mimicked by endothelin ETA- and angiotensin II AT1-receptor stimulation. Acidosis markedly suppresses the regulation induced by Ca2+ mobilizers, but certain Ca2+ sensitizers are able to induce the positive inotropic effect with central and/or downstream mechanisms even under pathophysiological conditions.
[发布日期] [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类] 药学
[关键词] Ca2+ sensitizer;Ca2+ transient;force-frequency relationship;Frank-Starling mechanism;acidosis [时效性]