Sprint training improves contractility in postinfarction rat myocytes: role of Na+/Ca2+ exchange. (73/309)

Previous studies in adult myocytes isolated from rat hearts 3-9 wk after myocardial infarction (MI) demonstrated abnormal contractility and decreased Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1) activity. In addition, a program of high-intensity sprint training (HIST) instituted shortly after MI restored both contractility and NCX1 activity toward normal. The present study examined the hypotheses that reduced NCX1 activity caused abnormal contractility in myocytes isolated from sedentary (Sed) rat hearts 9-11 wk after coronary artery ligation and that HIST ameliorated contractile dysfunction in post-MI myocytes by increasing NCX1 activity. The approach was to upregulate NCX1 in MI-sedentary (MISed) myocytes and downregulate NCX1 in MI-exercised (MIHIST) myocytes by adenovirus-mediated gene transfer. Overexpression of NCX1 in MISed myocytes did not affect sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase and calsequestrin levels but rescued contractile abnormalities observed in MISed myocytes. That is, at 5 mM extracellular Ca(2+) concentration, the subnormal contraction amplitude in MISed myocytes (compared with Sham myocytes) was increased toward normal by NCX1 overexpression, whereas at 0.6 mM extracellular Ca(2+) concentration the supernormal contraction amplitude in MISed myocytes was lowered. Conversely, NCX1 downregulation by antisense in MIHIST myocytes abolished the beneficial effects of HIST on contraction amplitudes in MI myocytes. We suggest that decreased NCX1 activity may play an important role in contractile abnormalities in post-MI myocytes and that HIST ameliorated contractile dysfunction in post-MI myocytes partly by enhancing NCX1 activity.  (+info)

A beneficial role of cardiac P2X4 receptors in heart failure: rescue of the calsequestrin overexpression model of cardiomyopathy. (74/309)

The P2X4 purinergic receptor (P2X4R) is a ligand-gated ion channel. Its activation by extracellular ATP results in Ca2+ influx. Transgenic cardiac overexpression of the human P2X4 receptor showed an in vitro phenotype of enhanced basal contractility. The objective here was to determine the in vivo cardiac physiological role of this receptor. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that this receptor plays an important role in modulating heart failure progression. Transgenic cardiac overexpression of canine calsequestrin (CSQ) showed hypertrophy, heart failure, and premature death. Crossing the P2X4R mouse with the CSQ mouse more than doubled the lifespan (182 +/- 91 days for the binary CSQ/P2X4R mouse, n = 35) of the CSQ mouse (71.3 +/- 25.4 days, n = 50, P < 0.0001). The prolonged survival in the binary CSQ/P2X4R mouse was associated with an improved left ventricular weight-to-body weight ratio and a restored beta-adrenergic responsiveness. The beneficial phenotype of the binary mouse was not associated with any downregulation of the CSQ level but correlated with improved left ventricular developed pressure and +/-dP/dt. The enhanced cardiac performance was manifested in young binary animals and persisted in older animals. The increased contractility likely underlies the survival benefit from P2X4 receptor overexpression. An increased expression or activation of this receptor may represent a new approach in the therapy of heart failure.  (+info)

Defective glycosylation of calsequestrin in heart failure. (75/309)

OBJECTIVE: Levels of Ca2+ regulatory proteins have been extensively analyzed in cardiomyopathies as possible indices of change in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) structure and function. Measures of calsequestrin (CSQ), however, a critical protein component of the Ca2+ release complex in junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum, have provided little or no evidence of underlying dysfunction. We previously reported that calsequestrin isolated from heart tissue exists in a variety of glycoforms and phosphoforms reflecting mannose trimming of N-linked glycans and phosphorylation and dephosphorylation on protein kinase CK2-sensitive sites. METHODS: Here, we tested whether the distribution of molecular forms changes in heart failure (HF) reflecting possible remodeling of diseased tissue. Canine hearts were paced (220 beats/min) for 6-8 weeks to induce heart failure. Calsequestrin was purified from heart failure and sham-operated (control) treated canine ventricles and analyzed by electrospray mass spectrometry. RESULTS: The results showed striking changes in the mass distribution of calsequestrin molecules present in tissue from heart failure (five animals) compared with control (five animals). In heart failure, calsequestrin contained glycan structures that were uncharacteristic of normal junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum, consistent with altered metabolism or altered trafficking through secretory compartments. Glycoforms containing Man8,9, expected for a phenotype less muscle-like, were more than doubled in heart failure hearts, and molecules were also phosphorylated to a higher level. CONCLUSIONS: These data reveal in tachycardia-induced heart failure a new and potentially important change in the mannose content of calsequestrin glycans, perhaps indicative of defective junctional SR trafficking and Ca2+ release complex assembly.  (+info)

Drastic reduction in the luminal Ca2+ -binding proteins calsequestrin and sarcalumenin in dystrophin-deficient cardiac muscle. (76/309)

Luminal Ca2+ -binding proteins play a central role in mediating between Ca2+ -uptake and Ca2+ -release during the excitation-contraction-relaxation cycle in muscle fibres. In the most commonly inherited neuromuscular disorder, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the reduced expression of key Ca2+ -binding proteins causes abnormal Ca2+ -buffering in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of skeletal muscle. The heart is also affected in dystrophinopathies, as manifested by the pathological replacement of cardiac fibres by connective and fatty tissue. We therefore investigated whether similar changes occur in the abundance of luminal Ca2+ -regulatory elements in dystrophin-deficient cardiac fibres. Two-dimensional immunoblotting of total cardiac extracts was employed to unequivocally determine potential changes in the expression levels of SR components. Interestingly, the expression of the histidine-rich Ca2+ -binding protein was increased in the dystrophic heart. In contrast, the major Ca2+ -reservoir protein of the terminal cisternae, calsequestrin (CSQ), and the Ca2+ -shuttle and ion-binding protein of the longitudinal tubules, sarcalumenin, were drastically reduced in cardiac mdx fibres. This result agrees with the recently reported decrease in the Ca2+ -release channel and Ca2+ -ATPase in the mdx heart. Abnormal Ca2+ -handling appears to play a major role in the molecular pathogenesis of the cardiac involvement in X-linked muscular dystrophy.  (+info)

Organization of Ca2+ release units in excitable smooth muscle of the guinea-pig urinary bladder. (77/309)

Ca(2+) release from internal stores (sarcoplasmic reticulum or SR) in smooth muscles is initiated either via pharmaco-mechanical coupling due to the action of an agonist and involving IP3 receptors, or via excitation-contraction coupling, mostly involving L-type calcium channels in the plasmalemma (DHPRs), and ryanodine receptors (RyRs), or Ca(2+) release channels of the SR. This work focuses attention on the structural basis for the coupling between DHPRs and RyRs in phasic smooth muscle cells of the guinea-pig urinary bladder. Immunolabeling shows that two proteins of the SR: calsequestrin and the RyR, and one protein the plasmalemma, the L-type channel or DHPR, are colocalized with each other within numerous, peripherally located sites located within the caveolar domains. Electron microscopy images from thin sections and freeze-fracture replicas identify feet in small peripherally located SR vesicles containing calsequestrin and distinctive large particles clustered within small membrane areas. Both feet and particle clusters are located within caveolar domains. Correspondence between the location of feet and particle clusters and of RyR- and DHPR-positive foci allows the conclusion that calsequestrin, RyRs, and L-type Ca(2+) channels are associated with peripheral couplings, or Ca(2+) release units, constituting the key machinery involved in excitation-contraction coupling. Structural analogies between smooth and cardiac muscle excitation-contraction coupling complexes suggest a common basic mechanism of action.  (+info)

Subproteomics analysis of Ca+-binding proteins demonstrates decreased calsequestrin expression in dystrophic mouse skeletal muscle. (78/309)

Duchenne muscular dystrophy represents one of the most common hereditary diseases. Abnormal ion handling is believed to render dystrophin-deficient muscle fibres more susceptible to necrosis. Although a reduced Ca(2+) buffering capacity has been shown to exist in the dystrophic sarcoplasmic reticulum, surprisingly no changes in the abundance of the main luminal Ca(2+) reservoir protein calsequestrin have been observed in microsomal preparations. To address this unexpected finding and eliminate potential technical artefacts of subcellular fractionation protocols, we employed a comparative subproteomics approach with total mouse skeletal muscle extracts. Immunoblotting, mass spectrometry and labelling of the entire muscle protein complement with the cationic carbocyanine dye 'Stains-All' was performed in order to evaluate the fate of major Ca(2+)-binding proteins in dystrophin-deficient skeletal muscle fibres. In contrast to a relatively comparable expression pattern of the main protein population in normal vs. dystrophic fibres, our analysis showed that the expression of key Ca(2+)-binding proteins of the luminal sarcoplasmic reticulum is drastically reduced. This included the main terminal cisternae constituent, calsequestrin, and the previously implicated Ca(2+)-shuttle element, sarcalumenin. In contrast, the 'Stains-All'-positive protein spot, representing the cytosolic Ca(2+)-binding component, calmodulin, was not changed in dystrophin-deficient fibres. The reduced 2D 'Stains-All' pattern of luminal Ca(2+)-binding proteins in mdx preparations supports the calcium hypothesis of muscular dystrophy. The previously described impaired Ca(2+) buffering capacity of the dystrophic sarcoplasmic reticulum is probably caused by a reduction in luminal Ca(2+)-binding proteins, including calsequestrin.  (+info)

Coexistence of two calsequestrin isoforms in rabbit slow-twitch skeletal muscle fibers. (79/309)

The cardiac and skeletal muscle isoforms of calsequestrin (CS), the low affinity, high capacity Ca2+ binding protein localized in the lumen of sarcoplasmic reticulum, are the products of two different genes (Fliegel, L., Leberer, E., Green, N.M. and MacLennan, D.H. (1982) FEBS Lett. 242, 297-300), and can be both purified from slow-twitch skeletal muscle of the rabbit (Damiani, E., Volpe, P. and Margreth, A. (1990) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 11, 522-530). Here we show that both CS isoforms coexist in slow-twitch muscle fibers as indicated by indirect immunofluorescent staining of cryosections with affinity-purified antibodies specific for each CS isoform.  (+info)

Proteins of interstitial cells of Cajal and intestinal smooth muscle, colocalized with caveolin-1. (80/309)

The murine jejunum and lower esophageal sphincter (LES) were examined to determine the locations of various signaling molecules and their colocalization with caveolin-1 and one another. Caveolin-1 was present in punctate sites of the plasma membranes (PM) of all smooth muscles and diffusely in all classes of interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC; identified by c-kit immunoreactivity), ICC-myenteric plexus (MP), ICC-deep muscular plexus (DMP), ICC-serosa (ICC-S), and ICC-intramuscularis (IM). In general, all ICC also contained the L-type Ca(2+) (L-Ca(2+)) channel, the PM Ca(2+) pump, and the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger-1 localized with caveolin-1. ICC in various sites also contained Ca(2+)-sequestering molecules such as calreticulin and calsequestrin. Calreticulin was present also in smooth muscle, frequently in the cytosol, whereas calsequestrin was present in skeletal muscle of the esophagus. Gap junction proteins connexin-43 and -40 were present in circular muscle of jejunum but not in longitudinal muscle or in LES. In some cases, these proteins were associated with ICC-DMP. The large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel was present in smooth muscle and skeletal muscle of esophagus and some ICC but was not colocalized with caveolin-1. These findings suggest that all ICC have several Ca(2+)-handling and -sequestering molecules, although the functions of only the L-Ca(2+) channel are currently known. They also suggest that gap junction proteins are located at sites where ultrastructural gap junctions are know to exist in circular muscle of intestine but not in other smooth muscles. These findings also point to the need to evaluate the function of Ca(2+) sequestration in ICC.  (+info)