The transverse-axial tubular system (t-tubules) plays an essential role in excitation-contraction coupling in cardiomyocytes. Its remodelling is associated with various cardiac diseases. Numerous attempts were made to analyse characteristics essential for proper understanding of the t-tubules and their impact on cardiac cell function in health and disease. The currently available methodical approaches related to the fraction of the t-tubular membrane area produce diverse data. The widely used detubulation techniques cause irreversible cell impairment, thus, distinct cell samples have to be used for estimation of t-tubular parameters in untreated and detubulated cells. Our proposed alternative method is reversible and allows repetitive estimation of the fraction of t-tubular membrane ( ) in cardiomyocytes using short-term perfusion of the measured cell with a low-conductive isotonic sucrose solution. It results in a substantial increase in the electrical resistance of t-tubular lumen, thus, electrically separating the surface and t-tubular membranes. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp measurement and the new approach in enzymatically isolated rat atrial and ventricular myocytes, a set of data was measured and evaluated. The analysis of the electrical equivalent circuit resulted in the establishment of criteria for excluding measurements in which perfusion with a low conductivity solution did not affect the entire cell surface. As expected, the final average in ventricular myocytes (0.337 ± 0.017) was significantly higher than that in atrial myocytes (0.144 ± 0.015). The parameter could be estimated repetitively in a particular cell (0.345 ± 0.021 and 0.347 ± 0.023 in ventricular myocytes during the first and second sucrose perfusion, respectively). The new method is fast, simple, and leaves the measured cell intact. It can be applied in the course of experiments for which it is useful to estimate both the surface and t-tubular capacitance/area in a particular cell.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.837239 | DOI Listing |
J Gen Physiol
September 2024
Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
L-type CaV1.2 current (ICa,L) links electrical excitation to contraction in cardiac myocytes. ICa,L is tightly regulated to control cardiac output.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Cell Cardiol
August 2024
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
The sarcolemmal Ca efflux pathways, Na-Ca-exchanger (NCX) and Ca-ATPase (PMCA), play a crucial role in the regulation of intracellular Ca load and Ca transient in cardiomyocytes. The distribution of these pathways between the t-tubular and surface membrane of ventricular cardiomyocytes varies between species and is not clear in human. Moreover, several studies suggest that this distribution changes during the development and heart diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
May 2022
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czechia.
The transverse-axial tubular system (t-tubules) plays an essential role in excitation-contraction coupling in cardiomyocytes. Its remodelling is associated with various cardiac diseases. Numerous attempts were made to analyse characteristics essential for proper understanding of the t-tubules and their impact on cardiac cell function in health and disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Physiol
May 2019
School of Physiology, Pharmacology & Neuroscience, Biomedical Sciences Building, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TD, UK.
New Findings: What is the central question of this study? What is the cellular basis of the protection conferred on the heart by overexpression of caveolin-3 (Cav-3 OE) against many of the features of heart failure normally observed in vivo? What is the main finding and its importance? Cav-3 overexpression has little effect in normal ventricular myocytes but reduces cellular hypertrophy and preserves t-tubular I , but not local t-tubular Ca release, in heart failure induced by pressure overload in mice. Thus Cav-3 overexpression provides specific but limited protection following induction of heart failure, although other factors disrupt Ca release.
Abstract: Caveolin-3 (Cav-3) is an 18 kDa protein that has been implicated in t-tubule formation and function in cardiac ventricular myocytes.
Biomed Res Int
January 2019
Department of Cell Physiology, The Jikei University School of Medicine, 3-25-8 Nishi-shinbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-8461, Japan.
The present study was conducted to systematically investigate the optimal viral titer as well as the volume of the adenovirus vector (ADV) that expresses -actinin-AcGFP in the Z-disks of myocytes in the left ventricle (LV) of mice. An injection of 10 L ADV at viral titers of 2 to 4 × 10 viral particles per mL (VP/mL) into the LV epicardial surface consistently expressed -actinin-AcGFP in myocytes , with the fraction of AcGFP-expressing myocytes at ~10%. Our analysis revealed that SL was ~1.
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