Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae

Ventricular muscle has a biphasic response to stretch. There is an immediate increase in force that coincides with the stretch which is followed by a second phase that takes several minutes for force to develop to a new steady state. The initial increase in force is due to changes in myofilament pro...

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Main Authors: Amelia Power, Sarbjot Kaur, Cameron Dyer, Marie-Louise Ward
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00193/full
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spelling doaj-ff5d1fdc4dfc4956b0cf27a9f5fc06c22020-11-25T01:57:56ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2020-03-011110.3389/fphys.2020.00193505499Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat TrabeculaeAmelia PowerSarbjot KaurCameron DyerMarie-Louise WardVentricular muscle has a biphasic response to stretch. There is an immediate increase in force that coincides with the stretch which is followed by a second phase that takes several minutes for force to develop to a new steady state. The initial increase in force is due to changes in myofilament properties, whereas the second, slower component of the stretch response (known as the “slow force response” or SFR) is accompanied by a steady increase in Ca2+ transient amplitude. Evidence shows stretch-dependent Ca2+ influx during the SFR occurs through some mechanism that is continuously active for several minutes following stretch. Many of the candidate ion channels are located primarily in the t-tubules, which are consequently lost in heart disease. Our aim, therefore, was to investigate the impact of t-tubule loss on the SFR in non-failing cardiac trabeculae in which expression of the different Ca2+ handling proteins was not altered by any disease process. For comparison, we also investigated the effect of formamide detubulation of trabeculae on β-adrenergic activation (1 μM isoproterenol), since this is another key regulator of cardiac force. Measurement of intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) and isometric stress were made in RV trabeculae from rat hearts before, during and after formamide treatment (1.5 M for 5 min), which on washout seals the surface sarcolemmal t-tubule openings. Results showed detubulation slowed the time course of Ca2+ transients and twitch force, with time-to-peak, maximum rate-of-rise, and relaxation prolonged in trabeculae at optimal length (Lo). Formamide treatment also prevented development of the SFR following a step change in length from 90 to 100% Lo, and blunted the response to β-adrenergic activation (1 μM isoproterenol).https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00193/fullslow force responset-tubulesventricular trabeculaecalciumβ-adrenergic activation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amelia Power
Sarbjot Kaur
Cameron Dyer
Marie-Louise Ward
spellingShingle Amelia Power
Sarbjot Kaur
Cameron Dyer
Marie-Louise Ward
Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
Frontiers in Physiology
slow force response
t-tubules
ventricular trabeculae
calcium
β-adrenergic activation
author_facet Amelia Power
Sarbjot Kaur
Cameron Dyer
Marie-Louise Ward
author_sort Amelia Power
title Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
title_short Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
title_full Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
title_fullStr Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
title_full_unstemmed Disruption of Transverse-Tubules Eliminates the Slow Force Response to Stretch in Isolated Rat Trabeculae
title_sort disruption of transverse-tubules eliminates the slow force response to stretch in isolated rat trabeculae
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Ventricular muscle has a biphasic response to stretch. There is an immediate increase in force that coincides with the stretch which is followed by a second phase that takes several minutes for force to develop to a new steady state. The initial increase in force is due to changes in myofilament properties, whereas the second, slower component of the stretch response (known as the “slow force response” or SFR) is accompanied by a steady increase in Ca2+ transient amplitude. Evidence shows stretch-dependent Ca2+ influx during the SFR occurs through some mechanism that is continuously active for several minutes following stretch. Many of the candidate ion channels are located primarily in the t-tubules, which are consequently lost in heart disease. Our aim, therefore, was to investigate the impact of t-tubule loss on the SFR in non-failing cardiac trabeculae in which expression of the different Ca2+ handling proteins was not altered by any disease process. For comparison, we also investigated the effect of formamide detubulation of trabeculae on β-adrenergic activation (1 μM isoproterenol), since this is another key regulator of cardiac force. Measurement of intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) and isometric stress were made in RV trabeculae from rat hearts before, during and after formamide treatment (1.5 M for 5 min), which on washout seals the surface sarcolemmal t-tubule openings. Results showed detubulation slowed the time course of Ca2+ transients and twitch force, with time-to-peak, maximum rate-of-rise, and relaxation prolonged in trabeculae at optimal length (Lo). Formamide treatment also prevented development of the SFR following a step change in length from 90 to 100% Lo, and blunted the response to β-adrenergic activation (1 μM isoproterenol).
topic slow force response
t-tubules
ventricular trabeculae
calcium
β-adrenergic activation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00193/full
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AT camerondyer disruptionoftransversetubuleseliminatestheslowforceresponsetostretchinisolatedrattrabeculae
AT marielouiseward disruptionoftransversetubuleseliminatestheslowforceresponsetostretchinisolatedrattrabeculae
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