Cazorla O, Vassort G, Garnier D, Le Guennec J Y
Laboratoire de Physiologie des Cellules Cardiaques et Vasculaires, CNRS UMR 6542, Faculté des Sciences, Tours, F-37200, France.
J Mol Cell Cardiol. 1999 Jun;31(6):1215-27. doi: 10.1006/jmcc.1999.0954.
The intrinsic cellular mechanisms by which length regulates myocardial contraction, the basis of the Frank-Starling relation, are uncertain. The aim of this work was to test the hypothesis that passive force, possibly via titin, participates in the modulation of Ca2+ sensitivity of cardiac contractile proteins induced by stretch. Titin degradation by a mild trypsin digestion modulated passive force induced by increasing from 1.9 to 2.3 microm sarcomere length in skinned rat cardiac cells. Force-pCa curves were established at these two sarcomere lengths after various durations of trypsin application that induced different passive force levels. They allowed us to evaluate myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity by the pCa of half-maximal activation (pCa50). In control conditions, stretching cells from 1.9 to 2.3 microm induced a leftward shift of pCa50 (DeltapCa50) of 0.39+/-0.03 pCa units (mean+/-SEM, n=8 cells), reflecting an increase in Ca2+ sensitivity of the contractile machinery. Passive force measured every 2 min decreased exponentially after the beginning of the trypsin application (t1/2 approximately 12 min). The first 30% decrease of passive force did not affect the stretch-induced variation in Ca2+ sensitivity. Then, with further decrease in passive force, DeltapCa50 decreased. At the lowest passive force investigated 20% of initial passive force, DeltapCa50 decreased by approximately 55%. These effects were not accompanied by a significant modification of either maximal activated force at pCa 4.5 solution or pCa50 at 1.9 microm sarcomere length. This indicates that there was no major functional alteration of the contractile machinery during the protocol as also suggested by contractile and regulatory protein electrophoresis on 2.5-12% gradient and 15% SDS-PAGE gels. Thus, besides modulation induced by the reduced lattice spacing during enhanced heart refilling, Ca2+ sensitivity of the cardiac contractile machinery may be controlled at least partially by internal passive load, which is known to be largely attributable to titin.
长度调节心肌收缩的内在细胞机制(即Frank-Starling关系的基础)尚不清楚。本研究的目的是检验以下假设:被动力可能通过肌联蛋白参与拉伸诱导的心脏收缩蛋白Ca2+敏感性的调节。在去皮肤的大鼠心肌细胞中,用温和的胰蛋白酶消化使肌联蛋白降解,可调节从1.9微米增加到2.3微米肌节长度所诱导的被动力。在施加不同时间的胰蛋白酶(诱导不同的被动力水平)后,在这两个肌节长度下建立力-pCa曲线。通过半数最大激活pCa(pCa50),这些曲线使我们能够评估肌丝Ca2+敏感性。在对照条件下,将细胞从1.9微米拉伸至2.3微米,可使pCa50向左移动0.39±0.03 pCa单位(平均值±标准误,n = 8个细胞),这反映了收缩机制的Ca2+敏感性增加。在开始应用胰蛋白酶后,每2分钟测量一次的被动力呈指数下降(t1/2约为12分钟)。被动力最初下降30%并不影响拉伸诱导的Ca2+敏感性变化。然后,随着被动力进一步下降,DeltapCa50减小。在研究的最低被动力(初始被动力的20%)时,DeltapCa50下降了约55%。这些效应并未伴随pCa 4.5溶液中的最大激活力或1.9微米肌节长度下的pCa50发生显著改变。这表明在该实验过程中收缩机制没有重大功能改变,2.5%-12%梯度凝胶和15% SDS-PAGE凝胶上的收缩蛋白和调节蛋白电泳也表明了这一点。因此,除了在心脏充盈增强期间晶格间距减小所诱导的调节外,心脏收缩机制的Ca2+敏感性可能至少部分受内部被动力控制,已知内部被动力很大程度上归因于肌联蛋白。