Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Pharmacology (L.P., A.B., J.Q., V.O.R., S.F.S., R.B.R.) and Center for Molecular Therapeutics (S.F.S., R.B.R.), Columbia University, New York, NY; and the Department of Biochemistry and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (R.D.P.), University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
Abstract
Cell culture studies demonstrate an increase in cardiac L-type Ca
2+
current (
I
Ca,L
) density on sympathetic innervation in vitro and suggest the effect depends on neurally released neuropeptide Y (NPY). To determine if a similar mechanism contributes to the postnatal increase in
I
Ca,L
in vivo, we prepared isolated ventricular myocytes from neonatal and adult mice with targeted deletion of the NPY gene (
Npy
−/−
) and matched controls (
Npy
+/+
). Whole-cell voltage clamp demonstrates
I
Ca,L
density increases postnatally in
Npy
+/+
(by 56%), but is unchanged in
Npy
−/−
. Both
I
Ca,L
density and action potential duration are significantly greater in adult
Npy
+/+
than
Npy
−/−
myocytes, whereas
I
Ca,L
density is equivalent in neonatal
Npy
+/+
and
Npy
−/−
myocytes. These data indicate NPY does not influence
I
Ca,L
prenatally, but the postnatal increase in
I
Ca,L
density is entirely NPY-dependent. In contrast, there is a similar postnatal negative voltage shift in the
I
-V relation in
Npy
+/+
and
Npy
−/−
, indicating NPY does not influence the developmental change in
I
Ca,L
voltage-dependence. Immunoblot analyses and measurements of maximally activated
I
Ca,L
(in presence of forskolin or BayK 8644) show that the differences in current density between
Npy
+/+
and
Npy
−/−
cannot be attributed to altered Ca
2+
channel α
1C
subunit protein expression. Rather, these results suggest that the in vivo NPY-dependent postnatal increase in
I
Ca,L
density in cardiac myocytes results from regulation
I
Ca,L
properties by NPY.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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