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. 1998 May;23(5):269-79.
doi: 10.1016/s0143-4160(98)90023-9.

Confocal near-membrane detection of calcium in cardiac myocytes

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Confocal near-membrane detection of calcium in cardiac myocytes

L A Blatter et al. Cell Calcium. 1998 May.

Abstract

Near-membrane [Ca2+] may differ significantly from bulk cytosolic [Ca2+], particularly during rapid Ca2+ signalling events related to cardiac muscle excitation-contraction coupling. We used the lipophilic membrane-associated Ca2+ indicator Ca(2+)-Green C-18 (C-18) and laser-scanning confocal microscopy to detect extracellular [Ca2+] and changes of t-tubular [Ca2+] in cultured neonatal rat myocytes and in freshly isolated adult guinea pig ventricular myocytes. Changes of extracellular [Ca2+] were readily detected by the C-18 located in the cell membrane. Control experiments were carried out with 100 mM extracellular nickel to rapidly quench the fluorescent indicator accessible form the extracellular space. After exposure to Ni2+, C-18 fluorescence was lower than measured in Ca(2+)-free conditions indicating that C-18 was located in the outer leaflet of the cell membrane. In contrast, the lipophilic derivative of Indo-1 (FIP-18) was significantly internalized, as visualized using two-photon excitation of FIP-18. Surprisingly, in low extracellular [Ca2+], C-18 located in the outer leaflet of the cell membrane also reported transient elevations of intracellular [Ca2+] during application of 10 mM caffeine. In the absence of extracellular Na+ to inhibit Ca2+ removal via Na/Ca exchange, the intracellular Ca2+ signals evoked by caffeine were prolonged, as recorded with Fura-Red. However, the near-membrane Ca2+ signal simultaneously detected by C-18 did not increase during caffeine stimulation in the absence of extracellular Na+. These results suggest that the C-18 signal reports extrusion of cytosolic Ca2+ from the subsarcolemmal space mediated by Na/Ca exchange. C-18 was also used to analyze the extracellular accessibility of the t-tubular lumen in isolated guinea pig ventricular myocytes. After stepwise increases of [Ca2+]o with a rapid superfusion device, a wave-like Ca2+ gradient travelled along the t-tubules at a velocity of 3.4-16.3 microns/s. The solution change within the t-tubules was delayed by 0.63-2.3 s and wash-out of Ca2+ from the t-tubules slowed from t1/2 = 0.9 s at the surface to 1.7 s in deeper regions of the t-tubular system. This slow exchange of the solution within the t-tubules, lasting several seconds, may give rise to spatially inhomogeneous accumulation and/or depletion resulting from ion fluxes across the t-tubular membrane during physiological activity.

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