Literature DB >> 4062839

Spontaneous versus triggered contractions of "calcium-tolerant" cardiac cells from the adult rat ventricle.

A Fabiato.   

Abstract

Cardiac cells were isolated from the adult rat ventricle by an enzymatic treatment. The cells considered intact were quiescent in the presence of 2.5 mM free Ca2+ but responded to an electrical stimulation by an homogeneous and brief contraction. When the procedure failed, spontaneous cyclic contractions occurred. Often they propagated as a wave from an intercalated disk, and the tension recording showed several components in each contraction. Electrical stimulation at a frequency higher than that of the spontaneous contractions induced synchronous activation with a single component of the tension. Experiments in skinned cardiac cells suggested that the spontaneous cyclic contractions observed in enzymatically separated cardiac cells are caused by a spontaneous cyclic release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). This spontaneous release requires a Ca2+ overload of the SR. Its mechanism is different from that of the Ca2+-induced release of Ca2+, which is elicited by a rapid increase of [free Ca2+] at the outer surface of the SR of a previously quiescent skinned cell.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 4062839

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol        ISSN: 0300-8428            Impact factor:   17.165


  10 in total

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5.  The path of calcium in cytosolic calcium oscillations: a unifying hypothesis.

Authors:  L F Jaffe
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Review 8.  The role of luminal Ca regulation in Ca signaling refractoriness and cardiac arrhythmogenesis.

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Review 9.  Calcium-induced release of calcium in muscle: 50 years of work and the emerging consensus.

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10.  Cooling intact and demembranated trabeculae from rat heart releases myosin motors from their inhibited conformation.

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  10 in total

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