Heart failure-induced changes of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and cell excitability in rat cardiac postganglionic neurons

Author:

Tu Huiyin1,Liu Jinxu1,Zhang Dongze1,Zheng Hong2,Patel Kaushik P.2,Cornish Kurtis G.2,Wang Wei-Zhong3,Muelleman Robert L.1,Li Yu-Long12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska;

2. Department of Cellular and Integrative Physiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska; and

3. Department of Physiology, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai, China

Abstract

Chronic heart failure (CHF) is characterized by decreased cardiac parasympathetic and increased cardiac sympathetic nerve activity. This autonomic imbalance increases the risk of arrhythmias and sudden death in patients with CHF. We hypothesized that the molecular and cellular alterations of cardiac postganglionic parasympathetic (CPP) neurons located in the intracardiac ganglia and sympathetic (CPS) neurons located in the stellate ganglia (SG) possibly link to the cardiac autonomic imbalance in CHF. Rat CHF was induced by left coronary artery ligation. Single-cell real-time PCR and immunofluorescent data showed that L (Cav1.2 and Cav1.3), P/Q (Cav2.1), N (Cav2.2), and R (Cav2.3) types of Ca2+ channels were expressed in CPP and CPS neurons, but CHF decreased the mRNA and protein expression of only the N-type Ca2+ channels in CPP neurons, and it did not affect mRNA and protein expression of all Ca2+ channel subtypes in the CPS neurons. Patch-clamp recording confirmed that CHF reduced N-type Ca2+ currents and cell excitability in the CPP neurons and enhanced N-type Ca2+ currents and cell excitability in the CPS neurons. N-type Ca2+ channel blocker (1 μM ω-conotoxin GVIA) lowered Ca2+ currents and cell excitability in the CPP and CPS neurons from sham-operated and CHF rats. These results suggest that CHF reduces the N-type Ca2+ channel currents and cell excitability in the CPP neurons and enhances the N-type Ca2+ currents and cell excitability in the CPS neurons, which may contribute to the cardiac autonomic imbalance in CHF.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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