Effects of caffeine, tetracaine, and ryanodine on calcium-dependent oscillations in sheep cardiac purkinje fibers

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Abstract

Membrane current and tension were measured in voltageclamped sheep cardiac Purkinje fibers. Elevating the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) results in oscillations of membrane current and tension both at rest and during stimulation. During stimulation, an oscillatory transient inward current and an aftercontraction follow repolarization. We have examined the effects on the oscillations of changing the extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]o) and of adding various drugs. In agreement with previous work, high concentrations of drugs that affect the sarcoplasmic reticulum, namely caffeine (10-20 mM), tetracaine (1 mM), and ryanodine (10 LM), abolish the oscillations. However, at lower concentrations, these three drugs have different effects on the oscillations. Caffeine (1-2 mM) decreases the oscillation amplitude but increases the frequency. Tetracaine (100-500 AM) has little effect on the magnitude of the oscillations but decreases their frequency. Ryanodine, at all concentrations used (0.1-10 AM), eventually abolishes the oscillations but, in doing so, decreases the magnitude, leaving the frequency unaffected. When [Ca2+]. was changed in order to vary [Ca2+]0 both the frequency and the magnitude of the oscillations always changed in the same direction. This suggests that these three drugs have effects in addition to just changing [Ca2+]0. © 1985, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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Nieman, C. J., & Eisner, D. A. (1985). Effects of caffeine, tetracaine, and ryanodine on calcium-dependent oscillations in sheep cardiac purkinje fibers. Journal of General Physiology, 86(6), 877–889. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.86.6.877

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