Literature DB >> 17940841

T-tubule formation in cardiacmyocytes: two possible mechanisms?

Alessandro Di Maio1, Kimberly Karko, Rose M Snopko, Rafael Mejía-Alvarez, Clara Franzini-Armstrong.   

Abstract

We have followed the differentiation of transverse (T) tubules and of the associations between sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and either the plasmalemma (peripheral couplings) or the T tubules (dyads) in postnatal rat ventricular myocytes using electron microscopy. Dyads and peripheral couplings are collectively called Ca(2+) Release Units (CRUs) because they are the sites at which Ca(2+) is released from the SR. Profiles of T tubules, caveolae and dyads are mostly at the cell edge in early postnatal days and are found with increased frequency in the cell interior during the first two postnatal weeks. Using ferritin to trace continuity of T tubules lumen with the extracellular space, we find that some of T tubules (between approximately 6 and 25%), either singly or within dyads, lack ferritin in their lumen. The percentage of tubules that do not contain ferritin decreases slightly during postnatal differentiation and is not very different at the cells' edges and interior. We propose that T tubules form as invaginations of the plasmalemma that penetrate inward driven by accrual of membrane lipids and specific proteins. This occurs by a dual mechanism: either by the independent flow of SR and T tubule proteins into the two separate membranes or by the fusion of preformed vesicle tandems into the dyads. Most of the CRUs (approximately 86%) are constituted by peripheral couplings and ferritin containing dyads, thus constituting CRUs in which Ca(2+ )release from the SR is initiated by a membrane depolarization. In the remaining CRUs, activation of Ca(2+) release must be dependent on some other mechanisms.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17940841     DOI: 10.1007/s10974-007-9121-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil        ISSN: 0142-4319            Impact factor:   2.698


  36 in total

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Review 2.  T-tubule function in mammalian cardiac myocytes.

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Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  1993-02       Impact factor: 10.539

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  30 in total

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3.  Early transverse tubule development begins in utero in the sheep heart.

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5.  MG53 is dispensable for T-tubule maturation but critical for maintaining T-tubule integrity following cardiac stress.

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Review 6.  Cardiac T-Tubule Microanatomy and Function.

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Review 7.  Electromechanical coupling in the cardiac myocyte; stretch-arrhythmia feedback.

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8.  Optical single-channel resolution imaging of the ryanodine receptor distribution in rat cardiac myocytes.

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Review 9.  There goes the neighborhood: pathological alterations in T-tubule morphology and consequences for cardiomyocyte Ca2+ handling.

Authors:  William E Louch; Ole M Sejersted; Fredrik Swift
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10.  Junctophilin-2 is necessary for T-tubule maturation during mouse heart development.

Authors:  Julia O Reynolds; David Y Chiang; Wei Wang; David L Beavers; Sayali S Dixit; Darlene G Skapura; Andrew P Landstrom; Long-Sheng Song; Michael J Ackerman; Xander H T Wehrens
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