The thrombin receptor elevates intracellular calcium in adult rat ventricular myocytes

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Abstract

While there is evidence that thrombin receptor activation leads to contractile dysfunction and induces arrhythmias in ischemic/reperfused cardiac tissue, thrombin is variably reported to modulate intracellular calcium in cardiomyocytes. The present study demonstrates that thrombin receptor activation leads to a rise in intracellular calcium in adult ventricular myocytes and serves to reconcile previous discrepant findings. The thrombin receptor-derived agonist peptide (SFLLRN, a portion of the tethered ligand created by thrombin's proteolytic actions) increases cytosolic calcium and twitch amplitude in cardiomyocytes isolated from adult ventricles. The truncated control peptide FLLRN has no effect, establishing that the response to SFLLRN results from a specific agonist peptide-receptor interaction. However, the response to SFLLRN occurs only at high agonist peptide concentrations and thrombin itself is inactive. This result is not compatible with an action of SFLLRN at a distinct protease-activated receptor (PAR-2; which is activated by SFLLRN, but not by thrombin), since SLIGRL (a ligand which is selective for PAR-2, but not the thrombin receptor) has no effect. Rather, the enzyme-based cell isolation procedure may partially cleave the thrombin receptor and influence cell responses, since concentrations of SFLLRN which are sub-threshold in enzymatically disaggregated myocytes significantly increase the force of isometric contraction of intact rat papillary muscles. These studies provide the first evidence that thrombin receptor activation leads to a change in intracellular calcium and a positive inotropic response in adult ventricular myocardium.

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APA

Jiang, T., Danilo, P., & Steinberg, S. F. (1998). The thrombin receptor elevates intracellular calcium in adult rat ventricular myocytes. Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 30(11), 2193–2199. https://doi.org/10.1006/jmcc.1998.0779

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