The sarcolemmal mechanisms involved in the control of diastolic intracellular calcium in isolated rat cardiac trabeculae
- PMID: 8781189
- DOI: 10.1007/s004240050223
The sarcolemmal mechanisms involved in the control of diastolic intracellular calcium in isolated rat cardiac trabeculae
Abstract
We performed experiments using the calcium indicator Indo-1 to determine the relative roles of the sarcolemmal mechanisms involved in the regulation of diastolic intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in trabeculae from the rat heart. Ryanodine was used to eliminate sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) function. In the functional absence of the SR, 76.8 +/- 3.9% of the calcium was extruded by the Na-Ca exchange carrier in the [Ca2+]i range of diastolic concentration +/- 200-400 nM. This was assessed by measuring the recovery of [Ca2+]i from small perturbations in the presence and absence of extracellular sodium. The steady-state relationship between [Ca2+]o and [Ca2+]i was linear over the range of 1-40 mM, a 20-fold increase of [Ca2+]o produced a 1.97-fold +/- 0.13-fold increase in [Ca2+]i (n = 5). In the absence of extracellular sodium raising [Ca2+]o had a variable effect. In some preparations there was little change of [Ca2+]i while in others the response was almost as large as in control conditions. We conclude that the Na-Ca exchanger contributes approximately 77% of sarcolemmal calcium extrusion following small perturbations in [Ca2+]i and that this fraction does not diminish as the [Ca2+]i declines. In addition we have shown a sodium-independent entry of calcium into quiescent cardiac muscle under resting conditions.
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