Alternans Goes Subcellular
2002; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 91; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Catalão
10.1161/01.res.0000036862.37203.f4
ISSN1524-4571
AutoresBurkert Pieske, Jens Kockskämper,
Tópico(s)Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling
ResumoHomeCirculation ResearchVol. 91, No. 7Alternans Goes Subcellular Free AccessEditorialPDF/EPUBAboutView PDFView EPUBSections ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload citationsTrack citationsPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyReddit Jump toFree AccessEditorialPDF/EPUBAlternans Goes SubcellularA "Disease" of the Ryanodine Receptor? Burkert Pieske and Jens Kockskämper Burkert PieskeBurkert Pieske From the Department of Cardiology and Pneumology, University of Göttingen, Germany. and Jens KockskämperJens Kockskämper From the Department of Cardiology and Pneumology, University of Göttingen, Germany. Originally published4 Oct 2002https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000036862.37203.F4Circulation Research. 2002;91:553–555In 1872 Traube1 first described pulsus alternans, a regular beat-to-beat alternation of the strength of the heartbeat. Since then, cardiologists and physiologists have learned that cardiac alternans can come in many flavors: as mechanical, electrical, or [Ca2+]i transient alternans (Ca2+ alternans).2 They also had to realize that alternans is a life-threatening condition, less so because of impaired cardiac output but because it can lead to ventricular fibrillation (VF) and sudden cardiac death. How exactly electromechanical alternations of the heartbeat can cause VF has long been an open question. A leap forward came recently with an elegant study on electrical (T-wave) alternans in guinea-pig hearts.3 It was shown that during alternans, neighboring regions within the heart started to alternate out-of-phase with each other (discordant alternans). Such discordant electrical alternans, if sufficient in magnitude, led to unidirectional block and reentry, thereby causing VF.Ca2+ Alternans: The Heart of the ProblemDespite recent advances in our understanding of the mechanisms linking electromechanical alternans to VF, the crucial question still remains: how does alternans develop in the first place? The study of cellular Ca2+ alternans might help answer this question because Ca2+ alternans lies at the heart of the problem. It causes both mechanical alternans (by activation of the myofilaments) and electrical alternans (by modulation of Ca2+-dependent membrane currents). Experimental interventions aimed at disabling sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release abolish electromechanical alternans.4 Furthermore, enhancement of sarcolemmal Ca2+ influx and/or SR Ca2+ load and release can reverse alternans.5,6 Thus, modulation of the SR Ca2+ release process is somehow critically involved in the generation of alternans and only a detailed study of this process can help elucidate the underlying mechanisms.In the last 20 years, scientists have learned a tremendous deal about the subcellular and even molecular events taking place during SR Ca2+ release.7 In the heart, Ca2+ entering during an action potential (AP) through L-type Ca2+ channels (ICa) triggers the release of Ca2+ from the SR via activation of Ca2+ release channels or ryanodine receptors (RyRs) (Figure, Top). This Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) mechanism is essential for cardiac contraction and, hence, highly regulated. In ventricular myocytes, an AP triggers CICR almost instantaneously and synchronously throughout the entire cell. This is because of the transverse (T) tubular membrane system extending deep into the cell and the close apposition of T tubular and SR membranes containing adjacent Ca2+ channels and RyRs, respectively. Synchronicity is important. It ensures a fast upstroke of the global [Ca2+]i transient and synchronous activation of the myofilaments for efficient contraction of the myocyte (Figure, A). Alterations of this fine-tuned process of CICR may underlie defects of contraction in cardiac disease.8,9Download figureDownload PowerPointTop, Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) in two neighboring dyads in a ventricular myocyte. A, Identical local [Ca2+]i transients during normal CICR. B and C, Local [Ca2+]i transients during subcellular Ca2+ alternans can alternate in-phase (B) or out-of-phase (C). In the former case, global Ca2+ alternans develops, whereas in the latter case, global [Ca2+]i transients are diminished and prolonged.In a article in this issue of Circulation Research, Díaz and colleagues10 pursue the question of what consequences depression of RyR function only might have on the complex process of CICR. Using single rat ventricular myocytes, they used confocal microscopy and a fluorescent Ca2+ indicator to image local Ca2+ release and simultaneous voltage clamp to control membrane potential and ICa. In order to depress RyRs, they challenged the myocytes with either the local anesthetic tetracaine or the fatty acid butyrate. The former is a known blocker of RyRs, whereas the latter may inhibit RyRs through intracellular acidosis. Expectedly, tetracaine and butyrate decreased the amplitudes of [Ca2+]i transients and contractions. Interestingly, however, there was large regional variability in the effects of both substances. Even more surprisingly, some regions started to develop alternans. The subcellular regions exhibiting Ca2+ alternans were 10 to 60 μm wide. Neighboring regions could alternate in-phase (Figure, B) or out-of-phase with each other (Figure, C). This adds new complexity to the phenomenon of cardiac alternans: alternans has gone subcellular. During subcellular Ca2+ alternans, activation of SR Ca2+ release was no longer synchronized. Local [Ca2+]i transients were biphasic. The first phase was due to some initial Ca2+ release, whereas the second phase was caused by miniwaves of Ca2+ spreading away from a neighboring initiation site into regions of low [Ca2+]i. Consequently, spatially inhomogeneous subcellular Ca2+ alternans caused prolonged and diminished global [Ca2+]i transients and uncoordinated, inefficient contraction of the myocytes. But how common is this novel form of subcellular Ca2+ alternans? A recent study in cat atrial myocytes has made strikingly similar observations on Ca2+ alternans, including large spatiotemporal heterogeneities and biphasic local [Ca2+]i transients caused by delayed Ca2+ waves.11 The fact that subcellular alternans occurs in both atrial and ventricular myocytes in two different species and, in addition, that it can be induced by a variety of interventions,10,11 may suggest (1) that it is a multifactorial process and (2) that it may be more common than previously recognized. Further studies, however, will have to clarify this issue. More importantly, it will have to be demonstrated that subcellular Ca2+ alternans is also present in the intact heart (not only in isolated cells) and that it is somehow capable of eliciting discordant regional Ca2+ alternans of the type recently imaged in ischemic rabbit heart.12What Do We Learn About the Underlying Mechanisms of Alternans?In addition to revealing exciting new insights into the subcellular features of Ca2+ alternans, Díaz and colleagues also offer suggestions as to the underlying mechanisms. They found that global Ca2+ influx was unchanged during alternans. Furthermore, global Ca2+ efflux was little altered, implying that global SR Ca2+ content and release were little changed as well. These results fit well with previous studies indicating that neither ICa nor SR Ca2+ load alternate significantly during alternans.6 Because Ca2+ alternans is a local phenomenon, it is important to consider the possibility of local (subcellular) rather than global (cellular) alternations of SR Ca2+ release. Consequently, the authors calculated local Ca2+ fluxes and found that the local loss of Ca2+ during alternans was about 2 to 3 times larger than indicated by the global loss. Importantly, however, this local loss of Ca2+ was still so small that it was unlikely to account for the large alternations of the local [Ca2+]i transients. For their calculations of local Ca2+ fluxes Díaz et al10 used the relationship between the global Na+-Ca2+ exchange current and the "global" [Ca2+]i transient (ie, [Ca2+]i averaged over the whole line scan) and, in addition, assumed that the SR network is discontinuous so that neighboring regions of SR would not communicate with each other. In other words, they assumed that there is no redistribution of intraluminal Ca2+ between neighboring SR elements. This assumption, although convenient for the calculations, might not hold true. Recent functional studies on local CICR in ventricular myocytes favor a continuous SR network in which redistribution of Ca2+ can occur readily.13 Intuitively, however, this would suggest that the local loss of Ca2+ during alternans might be even smaller than calculated. Clearly, refined models have to test this prediction. Nevertheless, evidence is mounting suggesting that alternations of cellular Ca2+, globally or locally, caused by changes of either ICa or SR Ca2+ content (Figure, Top, ① and ③) are unlikely to be the primary mechanism underlying Ca2+ alternans in cardiac myocytes.This leaves the RyR (Figure, Top, ②) as the prime candidate responsible for the observed alternations of SR Ca2+ release during alternans, leading us back to the initial rationale of the study by Díaz et al10: to depress selectively RyR function and examine the consequences on CICR. But do tetracaine and butyrate depress RyR function selectively? Butyrate, a short chain fatty acid, is certainly not a specific inhibitor of RyRs. Apart from inducing acidosis, it feeds into the mitochondria and may alter metabolism. Moreover, acidosis itself does not depress RyRs selectively but rather has multiple effects on cellular Ca2+ handling.7 Likewise, tetracaine not only depresses RyRs but also inhibits sarcolemmal ion channels. Under the present experimental conditions (voltage clamp, INa inactivated, and ICa constant), however, the latter should not be a factor, and it appears reasonable to assume that tetracaine depresses RyRs rather specifically. This raises the provoking hypothesis that inhibition of RyRs may be sufficient to induce subcellular Ca2+ alternans.RyR as a Potential Therapeutic Target?It is clear that the incidence of cardiac alternans is increased in cardiovascular disease2 and that ischemic and failing myocardium is particularly vulnerable to alternans. The study by Díaz and coworkers in the present issue of Circulation Research could indicate that subcellular Ca2+ alternans may be a common condition associated with depressed RyR function, present long before electromechanical alternans becomes evident. Besides its potential arrhythmogenicity, subcellular Ca2+ alternans, by distorting normal [Ca2+]i transients and contractions, may result in futile Ca2+ cycling and waste of energy, which may be especially disadvantageous in ischemic or failing myocardium. Indeed, Díaz et al10 observed diminished and prolonged [Ca2+]i transients typical for failing human myocardium.14,15 Depression of RyRs may, by spatial and temporal desynchronization of SR Ca2+ release, cause Ca2+ alternans and contribute to arrhythmias as well as systolic and diastolic contractile dysfunction in cardiac disease. On the other hand, hyperphosphorylation of RyRs in heart failure causes dissociation of FKBP12.6 and increases SR Ca2+ leak, 16 whereas overexpression of FKBP12.6 improves SR Ca2+ handling by stabilizing RyRs in their closed conformation.17 Thus, a growing body of evidence implicates defective regulation of RyRs as a cause of dysfunctional Ca2+ handling. If this concept is supported by further studies, future therapeutic strategies might be directed towards modulation of the gating behavior of cardiac RyRs.The opinions expressed in this editorial are not necessarily those of the editors or of the American Heart Association.FootnotesCorrespondence to Priv-Doz Dr Burkert Pieske, Dept of Cardiology and Pneumology, University of Göttingen, Robert-Koch-Str 40, 37075 Göttingen, Germany. E-mail [email protected] References 1 Traube L. Ein Fall von Pulsus bigeminus nebst Bemerkungen über die Leberschwellungen bei Klappenfehlern und über acute Leberatrophie. Berlin Klin Wochenschr. 1872; 9: 185–188.Google Scholar2 Euler DE. Cardiac alternans: mechanisms and pathophysiological significance. Cardiovasc Res. 1999; 42: 583–590.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar3 Pastore JM, Girouard SD, Laurita KR, Akar FG, Rosenbaum DS. Mechanism linking T-wave alternans to the genesis of cardiac fibrillation. Circulation. 1999; 99: 1385–1394.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar4 Rubenstein DS, Lipsius SL. Premature beats elicit a phase reversal of mechanoelectrical alternans in cat ventricular myocytes. Circulation. 1995; 91: 201–214.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar5 Dumitrescu C, Narayan P, Efimov IR, Cheng Y, Radin MJ, McCune SA, Altschuld RA. Mechanical alternans and restitution in failing SHHF rat left ventricles. Am J Physiol. 2002; 282: H1320–H1326.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar6 Hüser J, Wang YG, Sheehan KA, Cifuentes F, Lipsius SL, Blatter LA. Functional coupling between glycolysis and excitation-contraction coupling underlies alternans in cat heart cells. J Physiol. 2000; 524: 795–806.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar7 Bers DM. Excitation-Contraction Coupling and Cardiac Contractile Force, 2nd ed. Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers; 2001.Google Scholar8 Gomez AM, Valdivia HH, Cheng H, Lederer MR, Santana LF, Cannell MB, McCune SA, Altschuld RA, Lederer WJ. Defective excitation-contraction coupling in experimental cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Science. 1997; 276: 800–806.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar9 Litwin SE, Zhang D, Bridge JHB. Dyssynchronous Ca2+ sparks in myocytes from infarcted hearts. Circ Res. 2000; 87: 1040–1047.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar10 Díaz ME, Eisner DA, O'Neill SC. Depressed ryanodine receptor activity increases variability and duration of the systolic Ca2+ transient in rat ventricular myocytes. Circ Res. 2002; 91: 585–593.LinkGoogle Scholar11 Kockskämper J, Blatter LA. Subcellular Ca2+ alternans represents a novel mechanism for the generation of arrhythmogenic Ca2+ waves in cat atrial myocytes. J Physiol. In press.Google Scholar12 Qian Y-W, Clusin WT, Lin S-F, Han J, Sung RJ. Spatial heterogeneity of calcium transient alternans during the early phase of myocardial ischemia in the blood-perfused rabbit heart. Circulation. 2001; 104: 2082–2087.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar13 DelPrincipe F, Egger M, Niggli E. Calcium signalling in cardiac muscle: refractoriness revealed by coherent activation. Nat Cell Biol. 1999; 1: 323–329.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar14 Beuckelmann DJ, Näbauer M, Erdmann E. Intracellular calcium handling in isolated ventricular myocytes from patients with terminal heart failure. Circulation. 1992; 85: 1046–1055.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar15 Pieske B, Kretschmann B, Meyer M, Holubarsch C, Weirich J, Posival H, Minami K, Just H, Hasenfuss G. Alterations in intracellular calcium handling associated with the inverse force-frequency relation in human dilated cardiomyopathy. Circulation. 1995; 92: 1169–1178.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar16 Marx SO, Reiken S, Hisamatsu Y, Jayaraman T, Burkhoff D, Rosemblit N, Marks AR. PKA phosphorylation dissociates FKBP12.6 from the calcium release channel (ryanodine receptor): defective regulation in failing hearts. Cell. 2000; 101: 365–376.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar17 Prestle J, Janssen PM, Janssen AP, Zeitz O, Lehnart SE, Bruce L, Smith GL, Hasenfuss G. Overexpression of FK506-binding protein FKBP12.6 in cardiomyocytes reduces ryanodine receptor-mediated Ca2+ leak from the sarcoplasmic reticulum and increases contractility. Circ Res. 2001; 88: 188–194.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar Previous Back to top Next FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited ByMedvedev R, Sanchez-Alonso J, Alvarez-Laviada A, Rossi S, Dries E, Schorn T, Abdul-Salam V, Trayanova N, Wojciak-Stothard B, Miragoli M, Faggian G and Gorelik J (2020) Nanoscale Study of Calcium Handling Remodeling in Right Ventricular Cardiomyocytes Following Pulmonary Hypertension, Hypertension, 77:2, (605-616), Online publication date: 1-Feb-2021. 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Sanguinetti M and Bennett P (2003) Antiarrhythmic Drug Target Choices and Screening, Circulation Research, 93:6, (491-499), Online publication date: 19-Sep-2003. October 4, 2002Vol 91, Issue 7 Advertisement Article InformationMetrics https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000036862.37203.F4PMID: 12364380 Originally publishedOctober 4, 2002 Keywordsryanodine receptoralternansventricular fibrillationPDF download Advertisement
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