We indirectly assessed if altered transarcolemmal Ca flux accompanies the decreased cardiac activity displayed by Trachemys scripta with anoxia exposure and cold acclimation. Turtles were first acclimated to 21 °C or 5 °C and held under normoxic (21N; 5N) or anoxic conditions (21A; 5A). We then compared the response of intrinsic heart rate (f) and maximal developed force of spontaneously contracting right atria (F), and maximal developed force of isometrically-contracting ventricular strips (F), to Ni (0.1-10 mM), which respectively blocks T-type Ca channels, L-type Ca channels and the Na-Ca-exchanger at the low, intermediate and high concentrations employed. Dose-response curves were established in simulated in vivo normoxic (Sim Norm) or simulated in vivo anoxic extracellular conditions (Sim Anx; 21A and 5A preparations). Ni decreased intrinsic f, F and F of 21N tissues in a concentration-dependent manner, but the responses were blunted in 21A tissues in Sim Norm. Similarly, dose-response curves for F and F of 5N tissues were right-shifted, whereas anoxia exposure at 5 °C did not further alter the responses. The influence of Sim Anx was acclimation temperature-, cardiac chamber- and contractile parameter-dependent. Combined, the findings suggest that: (1) reduced transarcolemmal Ca flux in the cardiac pacemaker is a potential mechanism underlying the slowed intrinsic f of anoxic turtles at 21 °C, but not 5 °C, (2) a downregulation of transarcolemmal Ca flux may aid cardiac anoxia survival at 21 °C and prime the turtle myocardium for winter anoxia and (3) confirm that altered extracellular conditions with anoxia exposure can modify turtle cardiac transarcolemmal Ca flux.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8459736PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2021.111043DOI Listing

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