Abstract
The ability of rabbit ventricular muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) to accumulate and retain Ca during Na-free perfusion was assessed using caffeine contractures and rapid cooling contractures (RCC). Muscles were exposed to a Na-free medium for 15 min, during which time a transient contracture developed and relaxed back to the resting tension level. Muscles were then either exposed to 20 mM caffeine or rapidly cooled to less than 5 degrees C, both of which produced large contractures. The magnitudes of those contractures are believed to be a relative index of SR Ca content. Reduction of extracellular [Ca] from 2 to 0.2 mM did not significantly alter the magnitude of either Na-free caffeine contractures or RCC. These are not the maximum contractures that can be obtained. The possibility that low extracellular [Ca] ([Ca]o) may increase passive Ca permeability is suggested in explanation of this effect. After equilibration with 100 nM ryanodine, both Na-free caffeine contractures and RCC are virtually eliminated. This suggests that even if the SR could accumulate Ca during the initial Na-free exposure in the presence of ryanodine, it could not retain that Ca in Na-free medium. It is proposed that the sarcolemmal Ca pump can extrude Ca from the cells at a rate sufficient to deplete the ryanodine-treated SR. When removal of Na was accompanied by increase of [K]o (to 12, 20, or 30 mM), the Na-free RCC were enhanced. Increasing [K]o during Na-free superfusion in the presence of ryanodine resulted in demonstrable RCC that were graded with [K] and completely suppressed by nifedipine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
103 articles.
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