Temperature acclimation modifies sinoatrial pacemaker mechanism of the rainbow trout heart
0301 basic medicine
Muscle Cells
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Potassium Channels
Pyridines
Ryanodine
Acclimatization
Action Potentials
Heart
In Vitro Techniques
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
03 medical and health sciences
Piperidines
Biological Clocks
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Potassium Channel Blockers
Animals
Calcium Channels
Microelectrodes
Cell Size
Delayed Rectifier Potassium Channels
Sinoatrial Node
DOI:
10.1152/ajpregu.00432.2006
Publication Date:
2006-09-29T01:14:48Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
The hypothesis of pacemaker level origin of thermal compensation in heart rate was tested by recording action potentials (AP) in intact sinoatrial tissue and enzymatically isolated pacemaker cells of rainbow trout acclimated at 4°C (cold) and 18°C (warm). With electrophysiological recordings, the primary pacemaker was located at the base of the sinoatrial valve, where a morphologically distinct ring of tissue comprising myocytes and neural elements was found by histological examination. Intrinsic beating rate of this pacemaker was higher in cold-acclimated (46 ± 6 APs/min) than warm-acclimated trout (38 ± 3 APs/min; P < 0.05), and a similar difference was seen in beating rate of isolated pacemaker cells (44 ± 6 vs. 38 ± 6 APs/min; P < 0.05), supporting the hypothesis that thermal acclimation modifies the intrinsic pacemaker mechanism of fish heart. Inhibition of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) with 10 μM ryanodine and 1 μM thapsigargin did not affect heart rate in either warm- or cold-acclimated trout at 11°C but reduced heart rate in warm-acclimated trout from 74 ± 2 to 42 ± 6 APs/min ( P < 0.05) at 18°C. At 11°C, a half-maximal blockade of the delayed rectifier K+current ( IKr) with 0.1 μM E-4031 reduced heart rate more in warm-acclimated (from 45 ± 1 to 24 ± 5 APs/min) than cold-acclimated trout (56 ± 3 vs. 48 ± 2 APs/min), whereas IKrdensity was higher and AP duration less in cold-acclimated trout ( P > 0.05). Collectively, these findings suggest that a cold-induced increase in AP discharge frequency is at least partly due to higher density of the IKrin the cold-acclimated trout, whereas contribution of SR Ca2+release to thermal compensation of heart rate is negligible.
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