| Literature DB >> 26333831 |
Kenneth J Drake1, Matthew S Shotwell2, John P Wikswo3, Veniamin Y Sidorov4.
Abstract
In clinical conditions, amino acid supplementation is applied to improve contractile function, minimize ischemia/reperfusion injury, and facilitate postoperative recovery. It has been shown that glutamine enhances myocardial ATP/APD (action potential duration) and glutathione/oxidized glutathione ratios, and can increase hexosamine biosynthesis pathway flux, which is believed to play a role in cardioprotection. Here, we studied the effect of glutamine and glutamate on electrical activity in Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts. The hearts were supplied by Tyrode's media with or without 2.5 mmol/L glutamine and 150 μmol/L glutamate, and exposed to two 6-min anoxias with 20-min recovery in between. Change in APD was detected using a monophasic action potential probe. A nonlinear mixed-effects regression technique was used to evaluate the effect of amino acids on APD over the experiment. Typically, the dynamic of APD change encompasses three phases: short transient increase (more prominent in the first episode), slow decrease, and fast increase (starting with the beginning of recovery). The effect of both anoxic challenge and glutamine/glutamate was cumulative, being more pronounced in the second anoxia. The amino acids' protective effect became largest by the end of anoxia - 20.0% (18.9, 95% CI: [2.6 ms, 35.1 ms]), during the first anoxia and 36.6% (27.1, 95% CI: [7.7 ms, 46.6 ms]), during the second. Following the second anoxia, APD difference between control and supplemented hearts progressively increased, attaining 10.8% (13.6, 95% CI: [4.1 ms, 23.1 ms]) at the experiments' end. Our data reveal APD stabilizing and suggest an antiarrhythmic capacity of amino acid supplementation in anoxic/ischemic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Action potential duration; amino acids; anoxia
Year: 2015 PMID: 26333831 PMCID: PMC4600381 DOI: 10.14814/phy2.12535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Rep ISSN: 2051-817X
Figure 1Action potential duration (APD) stability during long recovery phase after single anoxia. For each experimental replicate (N = 5), the APD time series is illustrated in light gray. For the purpose of graphical presentation, each original time series was adjusted to the overall preanoxia mean. The solid black line represents mean APD from the fitted model. The dotted black lines define a pointwise 95% confidence band. The vertical gray bar delineates the period of anoxia challenge.
Figure 2The typical double anoxia experiment when successive 6-min anoxia is followed by 20 min of recovery. The insets demonstrate monophasic action potential recorded at different phases of anoxia-induced action potential duration (APD) change.
Figure 3The dynamics of action potential duration (APD) change in response to two sequential insults of anoxia. Vertical gray bars show the two periods of anoxia. Upper panel: The solid blue and red colored lines depict mean APD for control (N = 8) and amino acids supplemented (N = 8) hearts, respectively. The dot–dash colored lines represent individual APD time series for each replicate. For the purpose of graphical presentation, each original time series was adjusted to the overall preanoxia mean. Lower panel: Estimated difference in mean APD for enriched versus normally perfused hearts with pointwise 95% confidence band.