Sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX-1) and calcium modulation: NCX protein expression patterns and regulation of early heart development

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Abstract

Ouabain-induced inhibition of early heart development indicated that Na/K-ATPase plays an important role in maintaining normal ionic balances during differentiation of cardiomyocytes (Linask and Gui [1995] Dev Dyn 203: 93-105). Inhibition of the sodium pump is generally accepted to affect the activity of the Na+-Ca++ exchanger (NCX) to increase intracellular [Ca++]. These previous findings suggested that Ca++ signaling may be an important modulator during differentiation of cardiomyocytes. In order to identify a connection between heart development and NCX-mediated Ca++ regulation, we determined the embryonic spatiotemporal protein expression pattern of NCX-1 during early developmental stages. In both chick and mouse embryos, NCX-1 (the cardiac NCX isoform) is asymmetrically expressed during gastrulation; in the right side of the Hensen's node in the chick, in the right lateral mesoderm in the mouse. At slightly later stages, NCX-1 is expressed in the heart fields at comparable stages of heart development, in the chick at stage 7 and in the mouse at embryonic day (ED) 7.5. By ED 8 in the mouse, the exchanger protein displays a rostrocaudal difference in cardiac expression and an outer curvature-inner curvature ventricular difference. By ED 9.5, cardiac expression has increased from that seen at ED8 and NCX-1 is distributed throughout the myocardium consistent with the possibility that it is important in regulating initial cardiac contractile function. Only a low level of expression is detected in inflow and outflow regions. To substantiate a role for the involvement of calcium-mediated signaling, using pharmacologic approaches, ionomycin (a Ca++ ionophore) was shown to perturb cardiac cell differentiation in a manner similar to ouabain as assayed by cNkx2.5 and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain expression. In addition, we show that an inhibitor of NCX, KB-R7943, can similarly and adversely affect early cardiac development at stage 4/5 and arrests cardiac cell contractility in 12-somite embryos. Thus, based upon NCX-1 protein expression patterns in the embryo, experimental Ca++ modulation, and inhibition of NCX activity by KB-R7943, these results suggest an early and central role for calcium-mediated signaling in cardiac cell differentiation and NCX's regulation of the initial heartbeats in the embryo. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Linask, K. K., Han, M. D., Artman, M., & Ludwig, C. A. (2001). Sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX-1) and calcium modulation: NCX protein expression patterns and regulation of early heart development. Developmental Dynamics, 221(3), 249–264. https://doi.org/10.1002/dvdy.1131

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