We have previously demonstrated that type II ryanodine receptors (RyR2) tetramers can be rapidly rearranged in response to a phosphorylation cocktail. The cocktail modified downstream targets indiscriminately, making it impossible to determine whether phosphorylation of RyR2 was an essential element of the response. Here, we used the β-agonist isoproterenol and mice homozygous for one of the following clinically relevant mutations: S2030A, S2808A, S2814A, or S2814D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtrial fibrillation (AF), the most common arrhythmia, has been associated with different electrophysiological, molecular, and structural alterations in atrial cardiomyocytes. Therefore, more studies are required to elucidate the genetic and molecular basis of AF. Various genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have strongly associated different single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with AF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
November 2023
Three-dimensional (3D) structured illumination microscopy (SIM) improves spatial resolution by a factor of two in both lateral and axial directions. However, the adoption of 3D SIM is limited by low imaging speed, susceptibility to out-of-focus light, and likelihood of reconstruction errors. Here we present a novel approach for 3D SIM using a spinning disk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarlier work has shown that ventricular ryanodine receptors (RyR2) within a cluster rearrange on phosphorylation as well as with a number of other stimuli. Using dSTORM, we investigated the effects of 300 nmol/liter isoproterenol on RyR2 clusters. In rat ventricular cardiomyocytes, there was a symmetrical enlargement of RyR2 cluster areas, a decrease in the edge-to-edge nearest neighbor distance, and distribution changes that suggested movement to increase the cluster areas by coalescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmong various super-resolution microscopic techniques, structured illumination microscopy (SIM) stands out for live-cell imaging because of its higher imaging speed. However, conventional SIM lacks optical sectioning capability. Here we demonstrate a new, to the best of our knowledge, approach using a phase-modulated spinning disk (PMSD) that enhances the optical sectioning capability of SIM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: We have previously demonstrated that type II ryanodine receptors (RyR2) tetramers can be rapidly rearranged in response to a phosphorylation cocktail. The cocktail modified downstream targets indiscriminately making it impossible to determine whether phosphorylation of RyR2 was an essential element of the response. We therefore used the β-agonist isoproterenol and mice with one of the homozygous mutations, S2030A , S2808A , S2814A , or S2814D , to address this question and to elucidate the role of these clinically relevant mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiac ryanodine receptor (Ryr2) Ca release channels and cellular metabolism are both disrupted in heart disease. Recently, we demonstrated that total loss of Ryr2 leads to cardiomyocyte contractile dysfunction, arrhythmia, and reduced heart rate. Acute total Ryr2 ablation also impaired metabolism, but it was not clear whether this was a cause or consequence of heart failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel 3D imaging system based on single-molecule localization microscopy is presented to allow high-accuracy drift-free (<0.7 nm lateral; 2.5 nm axial) imaging many microns deep into a cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRationale: Single-tilt tomograms of the dyads in rat ventricular myocytes indicated that type 2 ryanodine receptors (RYR2s) were not positioned in a well-ordered array. Furthermore, the orientation and packing strategy of purified type 1 ryanodine receptors in lipid bilayers is determined by the free Mg2+ concentration. These observations led us to test the hypothesis that RYR2s within the mammalian dyad have multiple and complex arrangements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review highlights recent and ongoing discoveries that are transforming the previously held view of dyad structure and function. New data show that dyads vary greatly in both structure and in their associated molecules. Dyads can contain varying numbers of type 2 ryanodine receptor (RYR2) clusters that range in size from one to hundreds of tetramers and they can adopt numerous orientations other than the expected checkerboard.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFL-type Ca(2+) channels and the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger are the main pathways for Ca(2+) influx and efflux across the sarcolemma. The majority of Ca(2+) channels are found in couplons adjacent to ryanodine receptors, but there are at least two smaller, physically and functionally distinct, extradyadic populations. NCX is more widely dispersed in the membrane although a subpopulation is closely associated with the alpha-2 isoform of the Na(+)/K(+) ATPase and has a direct effect on ECC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The molecular mechanisms controlling heart function and rhythmicity are incompletely understood. While it is widely accepted that the type 2 ryanodine receptor (Ryr2) is the major Ca(2+) release channel in excitation-contraction coupling, the role of these channels in setting a consistent beating rate remains controversial. Gain-of-function RYR2 mutations in humans and genetically engineered mouse models are known to cause Ca(2+) leak, arrhythmias, and sudden cardiac death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe couplons of the cardiomyocyte form nanospaces within the cell that place the L-type calcium channel (Ca(v)1.2), situated on the plasmalemma, in opposition to the type 2 ryanodine receptor (RyR2), situated on the sarcoplasmic reticulum. These two molecules, which form the basis of excitation-contraction coupling, are separated by a very limited space, which allows a few Ca(2+) ions passing through Ca(v)1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStandard local control theory, which describes Ca(2+) release during excitation-contraction coupling (ECC), assumes that all ryanodine receptor 2 (RyR2) complexes are equivalent. Findings from our laboratory have called this assumption into question. Specifically, we have shown that the RyR2 complexes in ventricular myocytes are different, depending on their location within the cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyzed the distribution of ryanodine receptor (RyR) and Cav1.2 clusters in adult rat ventricular myocytes using three-dimensional object-based colocalization metrics. We found that ∼75% of the Cav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccurately localizing molecules within the cell is one of main tasks of modern biology, and colocalization analysis is one of its principal and most often used tools. Despite this popularity, interpretation is often uncertain because colocalization between two or more images is rarely analyzed to determine whether the observed values could have occurred by chance. To address this, we have developed a robust methodology, based on Monte Carlo randomization, to measure the statistical significance of a colocalization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegrin-mediated adhesion to the ECM is essential for normal development of animal tissues. During muscle development, integrins provide the structural stability required to construct such a highly tensile, force generating tissue. Mutations that disrupt integrin-mediated adhesion in skeletal muscles give rise to a myopathy in humans and mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRyanodine receptors (RyRs) are located primarily on the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), adjacent to the transverse tubules and on the cell surface near the Z-lines, but some RyRs are on junctional SR adjacent to axial tubules. Neither the size of the axial junctions nor the numbers of RyRs that they contain have been determined. RyRs may also be located on the corbular SR and on the free or network SR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColocalization, in which images of two or more fluorescent markers are overlaid, and coincidence between the probes is measured or displayed, is a common analytical tool in cell biology. Interpreting the images and the meaning of this identified coincidence is difficult in the absence of basic information about the acquisition parameters. In this commentary, we highlight important factors in the acquisition of images used to demonstrate colocalization, and we discuss the minimum information that authors should include in a manuscript so that a reader can interpret both the fluorescent images and any observed colocalization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo alpha-isoforms of the Na+-K+-ATPase are expressed in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). The alpha 1-isoform is proposed to serve a cytosolic housekeeping role, whereas the alpha 2-isoform modulates Ca2+ storage via coupling to the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) in a subsarcolemmal compartment. To evaluate the ramifications of this proposed interaction, Ca2+-store load and the contributions of the primary Ca2+ transporters to Ca2+ clearance were studied in aortic VSMCs from embryonic wild-type (WT) and Na+-K+-ATPase alpha 2-isoform gene-ablated, homozygous null knockout (alpha 2-KO) mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCaveolae are present in almost all cells and concentrate a wide variety of signaling molecules, receptors, transporters, and ion pumps. We have investigated the distribution of the ryanodine receptor, the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, the predominant Na(+) channel isoform rH1, and the L-type calcium channel, Ca(v)1.2, relative to the muscle-specific caveolin isoform, caveolin-3, in adult rat ventricular myocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
September 2004
Colocalization of dihydropyridine (DHPR) and ryanodine (RyR) receptors, a key determinant of Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release, was previously estimated in 3-, 6-, 10-, and 20-day-old rabbit ventricular myocytes by immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. We now report on the effects of deconvolution (using a maximum-likelihood estimation algorithm) on the calculation of colocalization indexes. Clusters of DHPR and RyR can be accurately represented as point sources of fluorescence, which enables a model of their relative distributions to be constructed using images of point spread functions to simulate their fluorescence inside a cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
April 2003
Rapid, nongenomic effects of 17 beta-estradiol (E(2)) in endothelial cells are postulated to arise from membrane-associated estrogen receptors (ERs), which have not been visualized in vascular tissue. To identify membrane ERs, we used multiple site-directed ER alpha or ER beta antibodies to label en face rat cerebral and coronary arterial endothelia. Western blots revealed a novel 55-kDa ER alpha isoform.
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