Multiple Defects in Intracellular Calcium Cycling in Whole Failing Rat Heart

作者:Wasserstrom J Andrew; Sharma Rohan; Kapur Sunil; Kelly James E; Kadish Alan H; Balke C William; Aistrup Gary L
来源:Circulation-Heart Failure, 2009, 2(3): 223-U97.
DOI:10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.108.811539

摘要

Background-A number of defects in excitation-contraction coupling have been identified in failing mammalian hearts. The goal of this study was to measure the defects in intracellular Ca(2+) cycling in left ventricular epicardial myocytes of the whole heart in an animal model of congestive heart failure (CHF). Methods and Results-Intracellular Ca(2+) transients were measured using confocal microscopy in whole rat hearts from age-matched Wistar-Kyoto control rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats at approximate to 23 months of age. Basal Ca(2+) transients in myocytes in spontaneously hypertensive rats were smaller in amplitude and longer in duration than Wistar-Kyoto control rats. There was also greater variability in transient characteristics associated with duration between myocytes of CHF than Wistar-Kyoto controls. Approximately 21% of CHF myocytes demonstrated spontaneous Ca(2+) waves compared with very little of this activity in Wistar-Kyoto control rats. A separate population of spontaneously hypertensive rat myocytes showed Ca(2+) waves that were triggered during pacing and were absent at rest (triggered waves). Rapid pacing protocols caused Ca(2+) alternans to develop at slower heart rates in CHF. Conclusions-Epicardial cells demonstrate both serious defects and greater cell-to-cell variability in Ca(2+) cycling in CHF. The defects in Ca(2+) cycling include both spontaneous and triggered waves of Ca(2+) release, which promote triggered activity. The slowing of Ca(2+) repriming in the sarcoplasmic reticulum is probably responsible for the increased vulnerability to Ca(2+) alternans in CHF. Our results suggest that defective Ca(2+) cycling could contribute both to reduced cardiac output in CHF and to the establishment of repolarization gradients, thus creating the substrate for reentrant arrhythmias. (Circ Heart Fail. 2009;2:223-232.)