Influence of age and run training on cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchange

Author:

Mace Lisa C.,Palmer Bradley M.,Brown David A.,Jew Korinne N.,Lynch Joshua M.,Glunt Jason M.,Parsons Todd A.,Cheung Joseph Y.,Moore Russell L.

Abstract

Effects of age and training on myocardial Na+/Ca2+ exchange were examined in young sedentary (YS; 14-15 mo), aged sedentary (AS; 27-31 mo), and aged trained (AT; 8- to 11-wk treadmill run training) male Fischer Brown Norway rats. Whole heart performance and isolated cardiocyte Na+/Ca2+ exchange characteristics were measured. At the whole heart level, a small but significant slowing of late isovolumic left ventricular (LV) relaxation, which may be indicative of altered Na+/Ca2+ exchange activity, was seen in hearts from AS rats. This subtle impairment in relaxation was not observed in hearts from AT rats. At the single-cardiocyte level, late action potential duration was prolonged, resting membrane potential was more positive, and overshoot potential was greater in cardiocytes from AS rats than from YS rats ( P < 0.05). Training did not influence any of these age-related action potential characteristics. In electrically paced cardiocytes, neither shortening nor intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) dynamics was influenced by age or training. Similarly, neither age nor training influenced the rate of [Ca2+]i clearance via forward (Nain+ /Caout2+) Na+/Ca2+ exchange after caffeine-induced Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum or cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchanger protein (NCX1) expression. However, when whole cell patch-clamp techniques combined with fluorescence microscopy were used to evaluate the ability of Na+/Ca2+ exchange to alter cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]c) under conditions where membrane potential ( Vm) and internal and external [Na+] and [Ca2+] could be controlled, we observed age-associated increases in forward Na+/Ca2+ exchange-mediated [Ca2+]c clearance ( P < 0.05) that were not influenced by training. The age-related increase in forward Na+/Ca2+ exchange activity provides a hypothetical explanation for the late action potential prolongation observed in this study.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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