1. Intracellular Ca2+ overload has been associated with established atrial arrhythmogenesis. The present experiments went on to correlate acute initiation of atrial arrhythmogenesis in Langendorff-perfused mouse hearts with changes in Ca2+ homeostasis in isolated atrial myocytes following pharmacological procedures that modified the storage or release of sarcoplasmic reticular (SR) Ca2+ or inhibited entry of extracellular Ca2+. 2. Caffeine (1 mmol/L) elicited diastolic Ca 2+ waves in regularly stimulated atrial myocytes immediately following addition. This was followed by a decline in the amplitude of the evoked transients and the disappearance of such diastolic events, suggesting partial SR Ca2+ depletion. 3. Cyclopiazonic acid (CPA; 0.15 μmol/L) produced more gradual reductions in evoked Ca2+ transients and abolished diastolic Ca2+ events produced by the further addition of caffeine. 4. Nifedipine (0.5 μmol/L) produced immediate reductions in evoked Ca2+ transients. Further addition of caffeine produced an immediate increase followed by a decline in the amplitude of the evoked Ca2+ transients, without eliciting diastolic Ca2+ events. 5. These findings correlated with changes in spontaneous and provoked atrial arrhythmogenecity in mouse isolated Langendorfperfused hearts. Thus, caffeine was pro-arrhythmogenic immediately following but not > 5 min after application and both C448ePA and nifedipine pretreatment inhibited such arrhythmogenesis. 6. Together, these findings relate acute atrial arrhythmogenesis in intact hearts to diastolic Ca2+ events in atrial myocytes that, in turn, depend upon a finite SR Ca2+ store and diastolic Ca2+ release following Ca2+-induced Ca 2+ release initiated by the entry of extracellular Ca2+. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, Y., Schwiening, C., Killeen, M. J., Zhang, Y., Ma, A., Lei, M., … Huang, C. L. H. (2009). Pharmacological changes in cellular Ca2+ homeostasis parallel initiation of a trial arrhythmogenesis in murine langendorff-perfused hearts. Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, 36(10), 969–980. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1681.2009.05170.x
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