Min Jiang-Yong, Meissner Achim, Wang Jianan, Morgan James P
Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2002 May;227(5):336-44. doi: 10.1177/153537020222700506.
The present study investigated the effects of mibefradil, a novel T-type channel blocker, on ventricular function and intracellular Ca(2+) handling in normal and hypertrophied rat myocardium. Ca(2+) transient was measured with the bioluminescent protein, aequorin. Mibefradil (2 microM) produced nonsignificant changes in isometric contraction and peak systolic intracellular Ca(2+) concentration (Ca(2+)) in normal rat myocardium. Hypertrophied papillary muscles isolated from aortic-banded rats 10 weeks after operation demonstrated a prolonged duration of isometric contraction, as well as decreased amplitudes of developed tension and peak Ca(2+) transient compared with the sham-operated group. Additionally, diastolic Ca(2+) increased in hypertrophied rat myocardium. The positive inotropic effect of isoproterenol stimulation was blunted in hypertrophied muscles despite a large increase in Ca(2+) transient amplitude. Afterglimmers and corresponding aftercontractions were provoked with isoproterenol (10(-5) and 10(-4) M) stimulation in 4 out of 16 hypertrophied muscles, but were eliminated in the presence of mibefradil (2 microM). In addition, hypertrophied muscles in the presence of mibefradil had a significant improvement of contractile response to isoproterenol stimulation and a reduced diastolic Ca(2+), although a mild decrease of peak Ca(2+)-transient was also shown. However, verapamil (2 microM) did not restore the inotropic and Ca(2+) modulating effects of isoproterenol in hypertrophied myocardium. Mibefradil partly restores the positive inotropic response to beta-adrenergic stimulation in hypertrophied myocardium from aortic-banded rats, an effect that might be useful in hypertrophied myocardium with impaired Ca(2+) homeostasis.