首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 734 毫秒
1.
OBJECTIVES: Human cardiac muscle from failing heart shows a decrease in active tension development and a rise in diastolic tension at stimulation frequencies above 50-60 beats/min due to both systolic and diastolic dysfunction. We have investigated underlying changes in cellular [Ca2+]i regulation. METHODS: Single ventricular myocytes were isolated enzymatically from the explanted hearts of transplant recipients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (nhearts = 5 ncells = 15) or dilated cardiomyopathy (nhearts = 6, ncells = 19). Cells were studied during whole-cell patch clamp with fluo-3 and fura-red as [Ca2+]i indicators (36 +/- 1 degrees C). RESULTS: In current clamp mode (action potential recording), the amplitude of Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) decreased at stimulation frequencies above 0.5 Hz; this decrease was more pronounced for cells from dilated cardiomyopathy. Diastolic [Ca2+]i increased at 1 and 2 Hz for both groups. Action potential duration (APD90) decreased with frequency in all cells; in addition there was a drop in plateau potential of 10 +/- 1 mV for cells from ischemic cardiomyopathy and of 13 +/- 2 mV for cells from dilated cardiomyopathy. In voltage clamp mode the L-type Ca2+ current showed reversible decrease during stimulation at 1 and 2 Hz. Recovery from inactivation during a double pulse protocol was slow (75 +/- 3% at 500 ms, 89 +/- 3% at 1000 ms) and followed the decay of the [Ca2+]i transient. CONCLUSIONS: The negative force-frequency relation of the failing human heart is due to a decrease in Ca2+ release of the cardiac myocytes at frequencies > or = 0.5 Hz, more pronounced in dilated than in ischemic cardiomyopathy. Inhibition of ICaL at higher frequencies, at least partially related to an increase in diastolic [Ca2+]i, will contribute to this negative staircase because of a decrease in the trigger for Ca2+ release, and of decreased loading of the SR.  相似文献   

2.
Electrophysiological characterization of neurons within the rat subiculum was carried out with intracellular recordings in an in vitro slice preparation. Subicular neurons responded to threshold pulses of depolarizing current delivered at a resting membrane potential (RMP) of 45.7+/-5.8 mV (mean+/-SD, n=85) with an initial burst of three to five fast action potentials that rode on a depolarizing envelope and was terminated by an afterhyperpolarization (burst AHP) (duration 113+/-35 ms; peak amplitude 2.7+/-0.6 mV, n=10). Tonic firing replaced the bursting mode at membrane potential less negative than -55 mV. Suprathreshold depolarizing pulses evoked at RMP both an initial burst and successive tonic firing. Intracellular staining with biocytin showed morphological features typical of pyramidal cells (n=8). The relationship between frequency of repetitive firing and injected current (f-I) revealed that the burst firing frequency (250-300 Hz) was only slightly influenced by the amount of injected current. By contrast, the f-I curve of the tonic firing phase depended upon current intensity: it displayed an initial segment that increased at first linearly and then turned into a plateau for both the early and the late inter-spike intervals. The frequency of the tonic firing declined only slightly with time, thus suggesting a lack of adaptation. During tonic firing, each single action potential was followed by a fast AHP and a depolarizing afterpotential. Termination of repetitive firing was followed by an AHP (spike-train AHP; duration 223+/-101 ms, peak amplitude 5.6+/-2.4 mV, n=17). Fast spike-train and burst AHPs were reduced by bath application of the Ca2+-channel blockers Co2+ (2 mM) and Cd2+ (1 mM) (n=8), thus suggesting the participation of Ca2+-dependent K+ conductances in these AHPs. Subicular bursting neurons generated persistent, subthreshold voltage oscillations at 5.3+/-1 Hz (n=20) during steady depolarization positive to -60 mV; at values positive to -55 mV, the oscillatory activity could trigger clusters of single action potentials with a periodicity of 0.9-2 Hz. Oscillations were not prevented by application of excitatory amino acid receptor and GABA(A) receptor antagonists (n=5), Ca2+-channel blockers (n=5), or Cs+ (3 mM; n=4), but were abolished by the Na+-channel blocker tetrodotoxin (1 microM; n=6). Our findings demonstrate that pyramidal-like subicular neurons generate both bursting and non-adapting tonic firing, depending upon their membrane potential. These neurons also display oscillatory activity in the range of theta frequency that depends on the activation of a voltage-gated Na+ conductance. These electrophysiological properties may play a role in the process of signals arising from the hippocampal formation before being funnelled towards other limbic structures.  相似文献   

3.
The features of time domain and power spectrum of high frequency electrocardiogram (HF-ECG) were studied in normal Kunming mice using a microprocessor ECG system. The results were as follows (mean +/- SD): (1) P-R interval was 34.9 +/- 4.7 ms (n = 58), about one third of the cardiac cycle. (2) The duration and peak-to-peak amplitude of QRS complex were 9.2 +/- 1.2 ms and 1.456 +/- 0.480 mV (n = 74) respectively. (3) The duration and amplitude of T wave were 10.2 +/- 3.2 ms and 0.336 +/- 0.115 mV, respectively (n = 58). (4) Q-T interval was 19.4 +/- 3.2 ms (n = 58), about one fifth of the cardiac cycle. (5) The total number of notches and slurs of leads II of 73 mice were 3 and 26 respectively. (6) The relative power content of each frequency range was: 0-80 Hz: 45.48 +/- 15.32%; 80-200 Hz: 43.97 +/- 9.95%; 200-300 Hz: 8.89 +/- 7.83%; 300-1000 Hz: 1.66 +/- 2.74%; 80-1000 Hz: 54.52 +/- 15.32%.  相似文献   

4.
Abnormalities of contractile function have been identified in cardiomyocytes isolated from failed human hearts and from hearts of animals with experimentally induced heart failure (HF). The mechanism(s) responsible for these functional abnormalities are not fully understood. In the present study, we examined the relationship between action potential duration, pattern of contraction and relaxation, and associated intracellular Ca2+ transients in single cardiomyocytes isolated from the left ventricle (LV) of dogs (n = 7) with HF produced by multiple sequential intracoronary microembolizations. Comparisons were made with LV cardiomyocytes isolated from normal dogs. Action potentials were measured in isolated LV cardiomyocytes by perforated patch clamp, Ca2+ transients by fluo 3 probe fluorescence, and cardiomyocyte contraction and relaxation by edge movement detector. HF cardiomyocytes exhibited an abnormal pattern of contraction and relaxation characterized by an attenuated initial twitch (spike) followed by a sustained contracture ('dome') of 1 to 8 s in duration and subsequent delayed relaxation. This pattern was more prominent at low stimulation rates (58% at 0.2 Hz, n = 211, 21% at 0.5 Hz, n = 185). Measurements of Ca2+ transients in HF cardiomyocytes at 0.2 Hz manifested a similar spike and dome configuration. The dome phase of both the contraction/relaxation pattern and Ca2+ transients seen in HF cardiomyocytes coincided with a sustained plateau of the action potential. Shortening of the action potential duration by administration of saxitoxin (100 nM) or lidocaine (30 microM) reduced the duration of the dome phase of both the contraction/relaxation profile as well as that of the Ca2+ transient profile. An increase of stimulation rate up to 1 Hz caused shortening of the action potential and disappearance of the spike-dome profile in the majority of HF cardiomyocytes. In HF cardiomyocytes, the action potential and Ca2+ transient duration were not significantly different from those measured in normal cells. However, the contraction-relaxation cycle was significantly longer in HF cells (314 +/- 67 ms, n = 21, vs. 221 +/- 38 ms, n = 46, mean +/- SD), indicating impaired excitation-contraction uncoupling in HF cardiomyocytes. The results show that, in cardiomyocytes isolated from dogs with HF, contractile abnormalities and abnormalities of intracellular Ca2+ transients at low stimulation rates are characterized by a spike-dome configuration. This abnormal pattern appears to result from prolongation of the action potential.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of taurine on the inwardly rectifying K+ current (IK1) in isolated guinea pig ventricular cardiomyocytes were examined using patch voltage-clamp methods. All experiments were performed at 36 degrees C. Taurine (10-20 mM) increased the action potential duration, but failed to affect the resting potential. Holding potential was maintained at -30 mV. The current was activated with an inwardly going rectification, and was completely blocked by Ba2+ (2 mM). Taurine inhibited IK1 at - 120 mV by 28.3+/-1.1% (n=6, P < 0.05) at 10 mM and by 36.0+/-2.1% (n=6, P < 0.01) at 20 mM. The reversal potential was shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction by 3.7+/-0.6 mV (n=6) at 20 mM. In inside-out patch-clamp experiments, the amplitude of unitary channels was -2.7+/-0.3 pA (n=21) at -90 mV. Symmetrical high-K+ (150 mM) solutions in both bath and pipette were used. The channel conductance was 32+/-2 pS (n=9). Taurine did not affect channel conductance, but markedly decreased the open probability at - 120 mV of channel by 21.5+/-2.4% (n=8, P < 0.01) at 10 mM, and by 56.7+/-3.8% (n=8, P < 0.001) at 20 mM. These responses were almost reversible. These results suggest that taurine directly modulates the open probability of the inwardly rectifying K+ current, resulting in regulation of the functions of heart cells.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of cibenzoline on transmembrane action potentials were examined in right ventricular papillary muscles and in single ventricular myocytes isolated from guinea-pig hearts. In papillary muscles, cibenzoline > or = 3 microM caused a significant decrease in the maximum upstroke velocity (Vmax) of the action potential without affecting the action potential duration. The inhibition of Vmax was enhanced at higher stimulation frequencies. In the presence of cibenzoline, trains of stimuli at rates > or = 0.2 Hz led to a use-dependent inhibition of Vmax. The time constant for Vmax recovery (tauR) from the use-dependent block was 26.2 s. The use-dependent block of Vmax with cibenzoline was enhanced and tauR was shortened when the resting potential was depolarized by high (8, 10 mM) [K+]o. The curve relating membrane potential and Vmax in single myocytes was shifted by cibenzoline (10 microM) in a hyperpolarizing direction by 7.1 mV. In myocytes treated with cibenzoline (10 microM), a 10-ms conditioning clamp to 0 mV caused a significant decrease in Vmax of the subsequent test action potential; the Vmax inhibition was enhanced modestly in association with a prolongation of the 0 mV clamp pulse duration. In the presence of cibenzoline (3 microM), application of a train of depolarizing pulses (10 ms, 200 ms) to myocytes from the resting level (-80 mV) to 0 mV resulted in a progressive Vmax reduction in a pulse number-dependent manner. Unlike glibenclamide (30 microM), cibenzoline (10 microM) did not prevent the hypoxia-induced shortening of action potential duration in papillary muscles. These findings indicate that the onset and offset kinetics of use-dependent Na+ channel block by cibenzoline are slow. Given its state dependence, cibenzoline may be a blocker of activated Na+ channels. The inhibitory action of this compound on the ATP-sensitive K+ current (I(K), ATP) would be minimal or negligible at concentrations causing sufficient Na+ channel block.  相似文献   

7.
The increasing number of heart transplant patients requires that physicians be able to recognize the electrocardiographic (ECG) and electrophysiologic properties of cardiac allografts. Cardiac allografts are characterized by modifications of resting ECGs and frequent arrhythmias in the postoperative period, and the loss of autonomic nervous control illustrated by permanent tachycardia and loss of heart rate variability during 24-hour ambulatory ECG recording. Some clinical and experimental observations suggest a mid-term reinnervation of the cardiac allograft, but this requires histologic confirmation. The electrophysiologic characteristics of the denervated myocardium are similar to those of the innervated myocardium at rest. However, supersensitivity to circulating catecholamines has been observed in cardiac allografts as in experimentally denervated hearts, which is responsible for a progressive increase in heart rate during exercise and a slow decrease during recovery. Supersensitivity of the denervated heart to acetylcholine may explain the high prevalence of donor sinus dysfunction due to impairment of its automaticity. More often, the sinus node dysfunction is transient and can be treated with an adenosine antagonist, such as theophylline, before permanent implantation of a pacemaker. In the case of pacemaker implantation, synchronization of the donor atria with the recipient atria is desirable, and an endocardial lead implantation is preferred. Several electrophysiologic changes have been observed during acute cardiac allograft rejection. From experimental studies, the most important of these are the disturbance of conduction in the atria and the atrioventricular node and a decrease in the amplitude of the ventricular potential. Initial studies on isolated myocytes show profound changes in membrane conductance during experimental cardiac rejection. The development of new noninvasive detection methods of cardiac allograft rejection, such as intramyocardial voltage electrogram monitoring and high-resolution ECG, could help early diagnosis.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Alterations in K+ channel expression and gating are thought to be the major cause of action potential remodeling in heart failure (HF). We previously reported the existence of a late Na+ current (INaL) in cardiomyocytes of dogs with chronic HF, which suggested the importance of the Na+ channel in this remodeling process. The present study examined whether this INaL exists in cardiomyocytes isolated from normal and failing human hearts. METHODS AND RESULTS: A whole-cell patch-clamp technique was used to measure ion currents in cardiomyocytes isolated from the left ventricle of explanted hearts from 10 patients with end-stage HF and from 3 normal hearts. We found INaL was activated at a membrane potential of -60 mV with maximum density (0.34+/-0.05 pA/pF) at -30 mV in cardiomyocytes of both normal and failing hearts. The steady-state availability was sigmoidal, with an averaged midpoint potential of -94+/-2 mV and a slope factor of 6.9+/-0.1 mV. The current was reversibly blocked by the Na+ channel blockers tetrodotoxin (IC50=1.5 micromol/L) and saxitoxin (IC50=98 nmol/L) in a dose-dependent manner. Both inactivation and reactivation of INaL had an ultraslow time course (tau approximately 0.6 seconds) and were independent of voltage. The amplitude of INaL was independent of the peak transient Na+ current. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiomyocytes isolated from normal and explanted failing human hearts express INaL characterized by an ultraslow voltage-independent inactivation and reactivation.  相似文献   

9.
Regional differences in action potential characteristics and membrane currents were investigated in subendocardial, midmyocardial and subepicardial myocytes isolated from the left ventricular free wall of guinea-pig hearts. Action potential duration (APD) was dependent on the region of origin of the myocytes (P < 0.01, ANOVA). Mean action potential duration at 90 % repolarization (APD90) was 237 +/- 8 ms in subendocardial (n = 30 myocytes), 251 +/- 7 ms in midmyocardial (n = 30) and 204 +/- 7 ms in subepicardial myocytes (n = 36). L-type calcium current (ICa) density and background potassium current (IK1) density were similar in the three regions studied. Delayed rectifier current (IK) was measured as deactivating tail current, elicited on repolarization back to -45 mV after 2 s step depolarizations to test potentials ranging from -10 to +80 mV. Mean IK density (after a step to +80 mV) was larger in subepicardial myocytes (1.59 +/- 0.16 pA pF-1, n = 16) than in either subendocardial (1.16 +/- 0.12 pA pF-1, n = 17) or midmyocardial (1. 13 +/- 0.11 pA pF-1, n = 21) myocytes (P < 0.05, ANOVA). The La3+-insensitive current (IKs) elicited on repolarization back to -45 mV after a 250 ms step depolarization to +60 mV was similar in the three regions studied. The La3+-sensitive tail current, (IKr) was greater in subepicardial (0.50 +/- 0.04 pA pF-1, n = 11) than in subendocardial (0.25 +/- 0.05 pA pF-1, n = 9) or in midmyocardial myocytes (0.38 +/- 0.05 pA pF-1, n = 11, P < 0.05, ANOVA). The contribution of a Na+ background current to regional differences in APD was assessed by application of 0.1 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX). TTX-induced shortening of APD90 was greater in subendocardial myocytes (35.7 +/- 7.1 %, n = 11) than in midmyocardial (15.7 +/- 3. 8 %, n = 10) and subepicardial (20.2 +/- 4.3 %, n = 11) myocytes (P < 0.05, ANOVA). Regional differences in action potential characteristics between subendocardial, midmyocardial, and subepicardial myocytes isolated from guinea-pig left ventricle are attributable, at least in part, to differences in IK and Na+-dependent currents.  相似文献   

10.
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) that infiltrate the heart are important immune effectors implicated in heart transplant rejection, myocarditis, and other cardiomyopathies. To investigate the mechanism(s) underlying CTL damage to the myocardium through activation of the Fas receptor (Fas/CD95/Apo-1) by the Fas ligand, we explored the interaction between peritoneal exudate CTLs (PELs), derived from perforin gene-knockout (P-/-) mice, and murine ventricular myocytes. Fas expression on isolated ventricular myocytes was demonstrated immunohistochemically. Action potentials, [Ca2+]i transients, and contractions of myocytes conjugated to P-/- PELs or treated with the apoptosis-inducing anti-Fas monoclonal antibody Jo2 were recorded. Action potential characteristics of nonconjugated myocytes and myocytes conjugated with P-/- PELs were, respectively, as follows: Vm, -73.2+/-1.5 and -53.6+/-6.4 mV (mean+/-SEM); action potential amplitude, 117.9+/-3.9 and 74.3+/-21.2 mV; and action potential duration at 80% repolarization, 17+/-6 and 42+/-13 milliseconds (all P<.05). P-/- PELs also induced early and delayed afterdepolarizations as well as arrhythmogenic activity. Diastolic [Ca2+]i increased during the cytocidal interaction with P-/- PELs, from a fluorescence ratio of 0.82+/-0.05 (n=7) to 1.98+/-0.09 (n=13) (P<.05). All of the effects caused by P-/- PELs were reproduced by incubating the myocytes with Jo2. Heparin (50 microg/mL), an antagonist of inositol trisphosphate (IP3)-operated sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ channels, or U-73122 (2 micromol/L), a phospholipase C inhibitor, but not the inactive agonist U-73343, prevented Fas-mediated myocyte dysfunction. Additionally, intracellular application (through the patch pipette) of the active IP3 analogue, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate, but not the inactive analogue, inositol 1,3,4-trisphosphate, caused electrophysiological changes resembling those resulting from P-/- PELs and Jo2, suggesting that CTL-induced Fas-based myocyte dysfunction is mediated by IP3. We conclude that a Fas-based perforin-independent mechanism of CTL action can account for the immunopathology seen in the allotransplanted heart, myocarditis, and dilated cardiomyopathy.  相似文献   

11.
The electrophysiological effects of MPC-1304, a novel calcium antagonist, were examined using the conventional microelectrode and whole-cell patch-clamp techniques in guinea-pig hearts. MPC-1304, at 100 nM or higher concentrations, produced a dose-dependent reduction in the action potential duration of guinea-pig papillary muscles, without changes in resting membrane potentials and maximum rate of rise of action potentials. In guinea-pig ventricular myocytes, MPC-1304 (1-100 nM) dose-dependently depressed the initial inward currents induced by depolarizing pulses from a holding potential of -30 mV in the external Tyrode solution, as did nifedipine, whereas the late outward current was not changed by MPC-1304. In the presence of 100 nM of MPC-1304 or 100 nM of nifedipine, the first depolarizing pulse from a holding potential of -80 mV caused a depression of the isolated L-type Ca2+ current (I(Ca)) by 29.5 % and 29.4 % of the control, respectively (tonic block), and successive pulses further suppressed I(Ca) in a use-dependent manner (use-dependent block). The degree of steady state use-dependent block of I(Ca) by 100 nM of MPC-1304 was 25.5 % at the stimulus frequency of 1 Hz and further increased to 34.0 % at 2 Hz (frequency-dependent block), which were significantly larger than those by 100 nM of nifedipine at both frequencies. The onset rate of use-dependent block by 100 nM MPC-1304 was significantly smaller than that by 100 nM nifedipine. MPC-1304 (100 nM) and nifedipine (100 nM) shifted the steady state inactivation curve of I(Ca) toward the negative potential by 3.3 mV and 9.1 mV in the mid-potential of the curve, respectively. The estimated dissociation constants of MPC-1304 were 137.7 and 49.9 nM for the resting and inactivated states of the L-type Ca2+ channel, respectively, and those of nifedipine were 113.9 and 18.1 nM, respectively. We conclude that MPC-1304 suppress the L-type Ca2+ channel with slow kinetics in a voltage- and frequency-dependent manner, which might be caused by its high affinity to the activated as well as to the inactivated state of the channel.  相似文献   

12.
This study examined the ionic mechanism of ibutilide, a class III antiarrhythmic in clinical use, on freshly isolated human atrial cells. Cells had resting potentials of -71.4 +/- 2.4 mV, action potentials with overshoot of 36.8 +/- 1.8 mV, duration of 265 +/- 89 msec at 90% repolarization and slow repolarization (n = 16). Ibutilide, at 10(-7) M, markedly increased action potential duration. Four types of outward currents were detected: Ito, Iso, a delayed rectifier and IK1. Ibutilide had no inhibitory effect on these outward currents at 10(-7) M (n = 28). In K(+)-free solutions and -40 mV holding potential, mean peak inward current at 20 mV was -1478 +/- 103 pA (n = 12). Ibutilide increased this current to -2347 +/- 75 pA at 10(-7) M, with half maximal effect (Kd) of 0.1 to 0.9 nM between -10 and +40 mV (n = 21). At similar concentrations, the drug increased APD, with Kd of 0.7 and 0.23 nM at 70 and 90% repolarization, respectively (n = 8). Ibutilide shifted the mid-point of the steady-state inactivation curve from -21 to -12.2 mV (n = 6), and reduced current decline during repetitive depolarization (n = 5). The drug induced inward current was carried by Na+o through a nifedipine inhibited inward channel because Na+o removal eliminated the effect, and nifedipine abolished the inward current and the drug induced APD prolongation. We propose that a Na+ current through the L-type Ca++ channel mediates ibutilide's potent clinical class III antiarrhythmic action.  相似文献   

13.
1. The electrophysiological properties of inspiratory neurons were studied in a rhythmically active thick-slice preparation of the newborn mouse brain stem maintained in vitro. Whole cell patch recordings were performed from 60 inspiratory neurons within the rostral ventrolateral part of the slice with the aim of extending the classification of inspiratory neurons to include analysis of active membrane properties. 2. The slice generated a regular rhythmic motor output recorded as burst of action potentials on a XII nerve root with a peak to peak time of 11.5 +/- 3.4 s and a duration of 483 +/- 54 ms (means +/- SD, n = 50). Based on the electroresponsive properties and membrane potential trajectories throughout the respiratory cycle, three types of inspiratory neurons could be distinguished. 3. Type-1 neurons were spiking in the interval between the inspiratory potentials (n = 9) or silent with a resting membrane potential of -48.6 +/- 10.1 mV and an input resistance of 306 +/- 130 M omega (n = 15). The spike activity between the inspiratory potentials was burst-like with spikes riding on top of an underlying depolarization (n = 11) or regular with no evidence of bursting (n = 12). Hyperpolarization of the neurons below threshold for spike initiation did not reveal any underlying phasic synaptic activity, that could explain the bursting behavior. 4. Type-1 neurons showed delayed excitation after hyperpolarizing square current pulses or when the neurons were depolarized from a hyperpolarized level. This membrane behavior resembles the response seen in other CNS neurons expressing an IA. The response to 1-s long depolarizing pulses with a large current strength showed signs of activation of an active depolarizing membrane response leading to a transient reduction in the spike amplitude. The relationship between the membrane potential and the amplitude of square current pulses (Vm-I) showed a small upward rectification below -70 mV, and spike adaptation throughout a 1-s pulse had a largely linear time course. 5. Type-1 neurons depolarized and started to fire spikes 398 +/- 102 ms (n = 20) before the upstroke of the integrated XII nerve discharge. The inspiratory potential was followed by fast hyperpolarization, a short fast-repolarizing phase (1,040 +/- 102 ms, n = 5) and a longer slow-repolarizing phase (lasting until the next inspiratory discharge). 6. Type-2 neurons were spiking in the interval between the inspiratory potentials with no evidence of bursting behavior and had an input resistance of 296 +/- 212 M omega (n = 26). The response to hyperpolarizing pulses revealed an initial sag and postinhibitory rebound depolarization. This membrane behavior resembles the response seen in other CNS neurons expressing an Ih. The Vm-I relationship was linear at depolarized potentials and showed a marked upward rectification below -60 mV. Spike trains elicited by 1-s long pulses showed a pronounced early and late adaptation. 7. Type-2 neurons depolarized and started to fire spikes 171 +/- 87 ms (n = 23) before the upstroke of the integrated XII nerve discharge. The inspiratory potential had a variable amplitude from cell to cell and was followed by a short hyperpolarization in the cells displaying a large amplitude inspiratory potential.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
INTRODUCTION: 2,3-Butanedione monoxime (BDM) has been widely used to inhibit contraction during optical recordings of cardiac membrane voltage changes, even though it markedly abbreviates cardiac action potentials. METHODS AND RESULTS: We compared the effects of BDM and of the F-actin disrupter cytochalasin D (cyto D) on isometric twitch force and transmembrane action potentials in isolated canine right ventricular trabeculae superfused with Tyrode's solution (2 mmol/L CaCl2, 37 degrees C) and stimulated at 0.5 Hz. BDM at 10 mmol/L and cyto D at 80 micromol/L were equally effective in reducing peak isometric force to 10%+/-3% (n = 6; mean+/-SEM) and 8%+/-1% (n = 8), respectively. Neither agent significantly altered resting tension. While 10 mmol/L BDM markedly shortened the action potential duration at 90% repolarization (APD90) from 198+/-7 msec to 146+/-9 msec (P < 0.001), 80 micromol/L cyto D had no significant effects on APD90 or on any other action potential parameter. The effects of BDM on peak isometric force and APD were completely reversible after 15 minutes of washout, whereas in the cyto D group contractile force continued to be reduced (13%+/-3%) and action potential characteristics did not show significant changes from control values after a 60-minute period of superfusion with cyto D-free Tyrode's solution. CONCLUSION: We conclude that cyto D should be considered an alternative excitation-contraction uncoupler for optical mapping studies of cardiac repolarization.  相似文献   

15.
Elevated thoracic temperature increases the wingbeat frequency of flying locusts. We investigated the extent to which temperature-induced changes in resting membrane potential and postsynaptic potential amplitude contribute to the effects of increased temperature on the frequency of the central flight rhythm. Flight neurons were hyperpolarized by changing the K+ concentration of the superfusing saline from 10 mM to 2 mM. 5 min of low-K+ superfusion hyperpolarized flight motoneurons from -42.8 mV to -50.1 mV with a concomitant decrease of the frequency of the central flight rhythm from 11.6 Hz to 10.5 Hz. The amplitude of postsynaptic potentials was halved after 10 min of zero Ca2+/high Mg2+ superfusion, but the frequency of the central rhythm did not change significantly. GABAergic inhibitory connections were reduced in amplitude using picrotoxin. This treatment increased the frequency of the central rhythm from 11.6 Hz to 12.9 Hz, and increased the thermosensitivity of the rhythm frequency. We conclude that the excitatory effect of increased temperature on rhythm frequency is not mediated by temperature effects on membrane potential and/or synaptic potential amplitude. We propose that the inhibitory effect of temperature-induced hyperpolarization of the membrane potential compensates for the excitatory effect of temperature on rhythm frequency (e.g. via increased conduction velocity). We further suggest that some measure of temperature compensation is afforded by equal effects on the amplitudes of excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, such that the net effect on the level of excitation is zero.  相似文献   

16.
Several studies have shown that the Na-Ca exchange is electrogenic in cardiac tissues and that the current carried by the exchange, iNa-Ca, participates in the development of the cardiac action potential plateau. The aim of the present study was to assess the contribution of iNa-Ca to the development of the plateau in different preparations, i.e. normal and hypertrophied (DOCA-salt) perfused rat hearts, normal and dilated (MS 200 strain) perfused hamster hearts and normal human atrial myocytes and to examine the repercussion of iNa-Ca suppression on the global electrogram of the perfused guinea-pig heart. iNa-Ca was suppressed by briefly substituting lithium for sodium (Li test). In the normal rat heart, the Li test resulted in a depression of the late component of the plateau. In the severely hypertrophied rat heart, the action potential was lengthened, the two components of the plateau barely distinguishable. The part of the plateau suppressed during Li perfusion was not larger in amplitude than in the normal rat heart, but was of much longer duration. In the dilated heart of hamsters older than 60 days of age the shortening effect of the Li test was much larger than in the normal hamster heart indicating a strongly increased contribution of iNa-Ca to the plateau development during dilatation. The contribution of iNa-Ca to the action potential plateau of human atrial myocytes was as large as that found in animal ventricles and varied with the type of cell studied. In the perfused guinea-pig heart the Li test resulted in a sizeable shortening of QT duration and a marked decrease in T wave amplitude suggesting that iNa-Ca may be a major source of current in the building up of the ventricular complex of the electrocardiogram in normal and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

17.
The chronotropic effect of angiotensin II (Ang II) was studied in cultured neurons from rat hypothalamus and brain stem with the use of the patch-clamp technique. Ang II (100 nM) increased the neuronal spontaneous firing rate from 0.8 +/- 0.3 (SE) Hz in control to 1.3 +/- 0.4 Hz (n = 7, P < 0.05). The amplitude of threshold stimulation was decreased by Ang II (100 nM) from 82 +/- 4 pA to 62 +/- 5 pA (n = 4, P < 0.05). These actions of Ang II were reversed by the angiotensin type 1 (AT1) receptor antagonist losartan (1 microM). In the presence of tetrodotoxin, Ang II (100 nM) significantly increased the frequency and the amplitude of the Cd2+-sensitive subthreshold activity of the cultured neurons. Ang II also stimulated the subthreshold early afterdepolarizations (EADs) to become fully developed action potentials. Similar to the action of Ang II, the protein kinase C (PKC) activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA, 100 nM) increased the firing rate from 0.76 +/- 0.3 Hz to 2.3 +/- 0.5 Hz (n = 6, P < 0.05) and increased the neuronal subthreshold activity. After neurons were intracellularly dialyzed with PKC inhibitory peptide (PKCIP, 5 microM), PMA alone, Ang II alone, or PMA plus Ang II no longer increased the action potential firing initiated from the resting membrane potential level. However, superfusion of PMA plus Ang II or Ang II alone increased the number of EADs that reached threshold and produced action potentials even in the presence of PKCIP (5 microM, n = 4). The actions of Ang II could also be mimicked by depolarizing pulse and K+ channel blockers (tetraethylammonium chloride or 4-aminopyridine). These results indicate that Ang II by activation of AT1 receptors increases neuronal excitability and firing frequency, and that this may involve both PKC dependent and -independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: The aim was to investigate the influence of contraction-excitation feedback on myocardial electrophysiology and arrhythmia susceptibility in the setting of experimental left ventricular hypertrophy. METHODS: New Zealand White rabbits with perinephritis hypertension were used. With the hearts perfused in vitro, left ventricular monophasic action potential duration and local effective refractory periods were determined at three sites, namely the anterior, apical, and posterior wall, together with ventricular tachycardia inducibility and ventricular fibrillation threshold under different loading conditions. RESULTS: The left ventricular dry weight to body weight ratio was increased by 31% in the hypertrophied group (3.863 x 10(-4), v 2.955 x 10(-4) in the controls). Left ventricular hypertrophy was associated with prolongation of action potential duration when the left ventricle was not loaded and under normal loading conditions. Changing from unloaded Langendorff to baseline working heart perfusion resulted in a consistent decrease in action potential duration and effective refractory period at all left ventricular sites in both hypertrophied and control hearts. Subsequent manipulations of myocardial loading resulted in decreases in action potential duration and effective refractory period in both groups of hearts. Ventricular tachycardia could not be induced in any heart in Langendorff mode. Under different increased loading conditions, a total of four hypertrophied hearts (44%) became inducible, while control hearts remained non-inducible. The ventricular fibrillation threshold under conditions of increased load tended to be lower in the hypertrophied hearts than the control hearts; in the setting of increased preload the hypertrophied group showed significantly increased vulnerability to ventricular fibrillation (median threshold currents 35 mA v > 100 mA, p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Left ventricular hypertrophy is associated with a prolongation of action potential duration and effective refractory period and an increased arrhythmia susceptibility in the setting of increased myocardial loading. There were no marked differences between the groups in the magnitude of the changes in action potential duration, effective refractory period, or dispersion of repolarisation and refractoriness resulting from manipulations of myocardial loading that could have been implicated in the increased arrhythmia susceptibility of the hypertrophied hearts during changes in load.  相似文献   

19.
There is increasing evidence that pathological changes in the myocardium during chronic heart failure (CHF) are partly regulated through the activation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), an effect mediated by the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R). We examined the expression of cardiac AT1R mRNA in normal (atria, n=7; ventricle, n=3) and end-stage CHF human hearts (atria, n=8; ventricle, n=14). Tissue was snap-frozen immediately after explantation during orthotopic cardiac transplantation; control specimens were obtained from healthy donor hearts rejected for technical reasons. Northern blots of purified total mRNA from each tissue were hybridized with a random primed radiolabeled probe for the coding sequence of AT1R. Stringent conditions were used for both hybridization (5X SSC, 65 degrees C) and washing (0.5X SSC, 0.1% SDS, 65 degrees C) of the membrane. Left and right atrial tissue showed low levels of AT1R mRNA expression in the controls, with statistically significant upregulation of expression in tissue from pathological hearts; CHF atria 1.28+/-0.86 optical density (OD) units, control atria 0.56+/-0.31 OD units, P=0.05 (mean+/-s.d.). There were undetectable levels in ventricles from either control (2/2) or dilated hearts (7/7). The results were independent of the etiology of the heart failure and suggest that increased levels of atrial AT1R mRNA may occur in response to elevated atrial pressures in heart failure.  相似文献   

20.
The spontaneous, synchronous activity induced by 4-aminopyridine (4AP, 50 microM) in the adult rat entorhinal cortex was analyzed with simultaneous field potential and intracellular recordings in an in vitro slice preparation. Four-AP induced isolated negative-going field potentials (interval of occurrence = 27.6 +/- 9.9 (SD) s; n = 27 slices) that corresponded to intracellular long-lasting depolarizations (LLDs), and ictallike epileptiform discharges (interval of occurrence = 10.4 +/- 5.7 min; n = 27 slices) that were initiated by the negative field potentials. LLDs recorded with K-acetate-filled microelectrodes triggered few action potentials of variable amplitude and had a duration of 1.7 +/- 0.8 s (n = 26 neurons), a peak amplitude of 11.8 +/- 5.0 mV (n = 26 neurons) and a reversal potential of -66.2 +/- 3.9 mV (n = 17 neurons). The ictal discharges studied with K-acetate microelectrodes consisted of prolonged depolarizations (duration = 72.9 +/- 44.3 s; peak amplitude = 29.2 +/- 11.4 mV; n = 25 neurons) with action-potential firing during both the tonic and the clonic phase. These depolarizations had a reversal potential of -45.3 +/- 3.8 mV (n = 4 neurons). Intracellular Cl- diffusion from KCl-filled microelectrodes made both LLDs and ictal depolarizations increase in amplitude (30.5 +/- 8.2 mV, n = 8 and 41.8 +/- 9.8 mV, n = 6 neurons, respectively). LLDs recorded with KCl and 2-(trimethyl-amino)N-(2, 6-dimethylphenyl)-acetamide (QX-314) microelectrodesreached an amplitude of 36.3 +/- 5.2 mV, lasted 12.5 +/- 6.5 s, and had a reversal potential of -31.3 +/- 2.5 mV (n = 4 neurons); under these recording procedures the ictal discharge amplitude was 41.5 +/- 5.0 mV and the reversal potential -24.0 +/- 7.0 mV (n = 4 neurons). The N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist 3,3-(2-carboxy-piperazine-4-yl)-pro-pyl-l-phosphonate (10 microM, n = 5 neurons) alone or concomitant with the nonNMDA receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitro-quinoxaline-2,3-dione (10 microM, n = 4 neurons) abolished ictal discharges, without influencing LLDs. LLDs were blocked by the gamma-aminobutyric acid-A (GABAA) receptor antagonist bicuculline methiodide (BMI, 10 microM, n = 6 neurons) or the mu-opioid receptor agonist (-Ala2-N-Me-Phe, Gly-ol) enkephalin (DAGO, 10 microM, n = 2 neurons). Application of BMI (n = 4 neurons) or DAGO (n = 2 neurons) to control the medium abolished LLDs and ictal discharges but disclosed a novel type of epileptiform depolarization that lasted 3.5 +/- 1.2 s and occurred every 5.2 +/- 2.6 s (n = 6 neurons). Our data indicate that 4AP induces in the rat entorhinal cortex a synchronous, GABA-mediated potential that is instrumental in initiating NMDA-dependent, ictal discharges. Moreover we present evidence for an active role played by GABAA-mediated potentials in the maintenance and termination of these prolonged epileptiform events.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号