| Literature DB >> 15860757 |
Benoit-Gilles Kerfant1, Dominica Gidrewicz, Hui Sun, Gavin Y Oudit, Josef M Penninger, Peter H Backx.
Abstract
We recently showed that phosphoinositide-3-kinase-gamma-deficient (PI3Kgamma-/-) mice have increased cardiac contractility without changes in heart size compared with control mice (ie, PI3Kgamma+/+ or PI3Kgamma+/-). In this study, we show that PI3Kgamma-/- cardiomyocytes have elevated Ca2+ transient amplitudes with abbreviated decay kinetics compared with control under field-stimulation and voltage-clamp conditions. When Ca2+ transients were eliminated with high Ca2+ buffering, L-type Ca2+ currents (I(Ca,L)), K+ currents, and action potential duration (APD) were not different between the groups, whereas, in the presence of Ca2+ transients, Ca2+-dependent phase of I(Ca,L) inactivation was abbreviated and APD at 90% repolarization was prolonged in PI3Kgamma-/- mice. Excitation-contraction coupling (ECC) gain, sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ load, and SR Ca(2+) release fluxes measured as Ca2+ spikes, were also increased in PI3Kgamma-/- cardiomyocytes without detectable changes in Ca2+ spikes kinetics. The cAMP inhibitor Rp-cAMP eliminated enhanced ECC and SR Ca2+ load in PI3Kgamma-/- without effects in control myocytes. On the other hand, the beta-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol increased I(Ca,L) and Ca2+ transient equally by approximately 2-fold in both PI3Kgamma-/- and PI3Kgamma+/- cardiomyocytes. Our results establish that PI3Kgamma reduces cardiac contractility in a highly compartmentalized manner by inhibiting cAMP-mediated SR Ca2+ loading without directly affecting other major modulators of ECC, such as AP and I(Ca,L).Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15860757 DOI: 10.1161/01.RES.0000168066.06333.df
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Res ISSN: 0009-7330 Impact factor: 17.367