Time course of L-type calcium current inactivation during the action potential is preserved in left ventricular hypertrophy

University of Leeds (2002) J Physiol 544P, S153

Communications: Time course of L-type calcium current inactivation during the action potential is preserved in left ventricular hypertrophy

R. Snowdon, M. Hussain and G. Hart

Department of Medicine, University of Liverpool, Daulby Street, Liverpool L16 3GA, UK

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The time course of the L-type calcium current (ICa) inactivation has been reported as prolonged in cardiac hypertrophy (Hart, 1994). These experiments, however, used rectangular voltage steps, and usually intracellular Ca2+ buffering. In this study we used the action potential clamp technique to investigate the inactivation of ICaL in left ventricular myocytes enzymatically isolated from a model of mild left ventricular hypertrophy in the guinea-pig.

Hypertrophy was induced by constriction of the abdominal aorta below the renal arteries with a silver clip (i.d. 0.5 mm) for 20 weeks; sham animals (control) underwent the same procedure without clip placement (Bryant et al. 1997). Surgery was performed under general anaesthesia (Hypnorm, 1 ml kg-1 and ketamine, 5 mg kg-1, I.M.). The guinea-pigs were humanely killed by pentobarbitone overdose (I.P., 280 mg kg-1). Current and voltage clamp experiments where conducted at 35 °C, using K+-based pipette solutions free of Ca2+ buffering, during whole-cell patch-clamp.

Action potentials, recorded from hypertrophied and control myocytes, were time-averaged and applied as the command potential during a double-pulse protocol where the action potential waveform was interrupted, at various time intervals, by a depolarization step to +10 mV (Linz et al. 1998). Cd2+-sensitive ICa, obtained during the step pulse, was plotted as a function of the maximal available ICa to obtain the inactivation variable (f ). Myocytes from clipped and sham animals were clamped with their own respective action potentials, both with a functional SR and also following inhibition of the SR with ryanodine and thapsigargin (1 mmol l-1).

There was no difference in the degree of ICa inactivation under physiological conditions between hypertrophy (n = 8) and control (n = 9) at any time point until control myocytes enter phase 3 of the action potential. With the SR inhibited ICa inactivation follows a slower time course in hypertrophy after the first 25 ms, becoming significant by 90 ms (hypertrophy 0.39 ± 0.03, control 0.30 ± 0.02, mean ± S.E.M., n = 8; P < 0.05, Student’s unpaired t test). The SR-dependent component, obtained by subtraction, was initially similar at 5 ms but thereafter was greater in hypertrophy (51 ms, hypertrophy 0.79 ± 0.03, control 0.88 ± 0.03; P < 0.05).

The time course of ICa inactivation during the action potential is unchanged in this model of hypertrophy, despite very different relative contributions to the Ca2+-dependent inactivation of ICa, the SR component being increased and the channel component being reduced in hypertrophy.

All procedures accord with current UK legislation.



Where applicable, experiments conform with Society ethical requirements.

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