Han Young Soo, Schaible Niccole, Tveita Torkjel, Sieck Gary
Department of Physiology & Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Anesthesia and Critical Care Research Group, Department of Clinical Medicine, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, 9037, Tromsø, Norway.
Exp Physiol. 2018 Jun;103(6):819-826. doi: 10.1113/EP086774. Epub 2018 May 5.
What is the central question of this study? Will discontinued stimulation of isolated cardiomyocytes (asystole) during hypothermia mitigate hypothermia-rewarming-induced cytosolic Ca overload? What is the main finding and its importance? Mimicking asystole or hypothermic cardiac arrest by discontinued stimulation of cardiomyocytes during hypothermia resulted in normal contractile function after rewarming. This result suggests that asystole during severe hypothermia provides protection from hypothermia-rewarming-induced contractile dysfunction in cardiomyocytes.
After exposure of spontaneously beating hearts or electrically stimulated isolated cardiomyocytes to hypothermia-rewarming (H/R), cardiac dysfunction or alteration in excitation-contraction coupling, respectively, is a consequence. In contrast, hypothermic cardiac arrest, as routinely applied during cardiac surgery, will not impose any hazard to cardiac function after rewarming. We hypothesize that by maintaining asystole during H/R, cardiomyocytes will avoid Ca overload attributable to the transient stimulation-evoked elevation of [Ca ] and thus, H/R-induced elevation of phosphorylated cardiac troponin I and reduced Ca sensitivity after rewarming. To test this hypothesis, the aim of the study was to determine whether discontinued electrical stimulation (to imitate hypothermic cardiac arrest) versus stimulation during 3 h of H/R prevents disruption of excitation-contraction coupling in our established cardiomyocyte H/R model. Cytosolic Ca and the contractile response (sarcomere length shortening) were measured using an IonOptix system, and the dynamic assessment of Ca sensitivity of contraction was conducted using a phase-loop plot. Cardiomyocytes were divided into three groups. Group 1 (time-matched control) was continuously stimulated at 0.5 Hz for 3 h at 35°C. Group 2 was continuously stimulated during H/R at 0.5 Hz, whereas in group 3 stimulation was discontinued during H/R and thus the cells remained quiescent until the resumption of stimulation after rewarming. The results demonstrate that discontinued stimulation of cardiomyocytes during H/R, imitating hypothermic cardiac arrest during cardiac surgery, provides protection against H/R-induced disruption of excitation-contraction coupling. We suggest that protective effects are caused by preventing the protein kinase A-induced elevation of phosphorylated cardiac troponin I, which is a key mechanism to reduce myofilament Ca sensitivity of contraction.
本研究的核心问题是什么?低温期间停止对分离的心肌细胞进行刺激(心脏停搏)是否会减轻低温复温引起的细胞溶质钙超载?主要发现及其重要性是什么?在低温期间通过停止对心肌细胞的刺激来模拟心脏停搏或低温性心脏骤停,复温后收缩功能正常。这一结果表明,严重低温期间的心脏停搏可保护心肌细胞免受低温复温引起的收缩功能障碍。
将自主跳动的心脏或电刺激的分离心肌细胞暴露于低温复温(H/R)后,分别会导致心脏功能障碍或兴奋-收缩偶联改变。相比之下,心脏手术中常规应用的低温性心脏骤停在复温后不会对心脏功能造成任何危害。我们假设,在H/R期间维持心脏停搏,心肌细胞将避免因短暂刺激引起的[Ca]升高导致的钙超载,从而避免H/R引起的复温后磷酸化心肌肌钙蛋白I升高和钙敏感性降低。为了验证这一假设,本研究的目的是确定在我们建立的心肌细胞H/R模型中,停止电刺激(模拟低温性心脏骤停)与在H/R期间进行刺激相比,是否能防止兴奋-收缩偶联的破坏。使用IonOptix系统测量细胞溶质钙和收缩反应(肌节长度缩短),并使用相位环图对收缩的钙敏感性进行动态评估。心肌细胞分为三组。第1组(时间匹配对照组)在35°C下以0.5 Hz连续刺激3小时。第2组在H/R期间以0.5 Hz连续刺激,而第3组在H/R期间停止刺激,因此细胞保持静止,直到复温后恢复刺激。结果表明,在H/R期间停止对心肌细胞的刺激,模拟心脏手术中的低温性心脏骤停,可防止H/R引起的兴奋-收缩偶联破坏。我们认为保护作用是通过防止蛋白激酶A诱导的磷酸化心肌肌钙蛋白I升高而产生的,这是降低肌丝收缩钙敏感性的关键机制。