| Literature DB >> 1337585 |
D J Fisher1, C A Tate, S Phillips.
Abstract
Sarcoplasmic reticulum- (SR-)mediated Ca2+ transport is slower in the fetal heart compared with the adult. Virtually all previous studies of cardiac SR Ca2+ transport were performed in the presence of oxalate, a dicarboxylic anion that is cotransported with Ca2+ in skeletal muscle SR. If anion transport is developmentally regulated in cardiac SR, this could explain, in part, the previously reported results. The purposes of this study were to establish the presence of an SR dicarboxylic anion transport process in the rabbit heart and to determine if the perinatal changes in SR Ca2+ transport occur in a dicarboxylic anion-dependent and/or independent manner. In isolated fetal and adult rabbit cardiac SR membranes, we measured Ca2+ ATPase rates and 45Ca2+ uptake in the presence of the dicarboxylic anions maleate and succinate compared with the zwitterionic buffer PIPES, to which cardiac SR is essentially impermeable. We also measured 14C-succinate uptake by fetal and adult SR membranes. Anion-independent Ca2+ ATPase activity and net 45Ca2+ uptake were significantly lower in the fetal SR membranes than in the adult. Maleate and succinate increased the Ca2+ ATPase rates in the fetal and adult SR, but the effect was significantly greater in the adult. Maleate and succinate stimulated earlier attainment of maximal net Ca2+ uptake in the fetal and adult SR, suggesting that these dicarboxylic anions stimulated the rate of Ca2+ accumulation. Maleate and succinate significantly increased the maximal net Ca2+ uptake in the adult SR, but not in the fetus. The percentage of stimulation of Ca2+ uptake by maleate and succinate was similar in the fetal and adult SR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1337585 DOI: 10.1203/00006450-199212000-00007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756