Vol. 274, Issue 2, H728-H741, February 1998
SPECIAL COMMUNICATION
Fluorescence measurement of calcium transients in perfused rabbit
heart using rhod 2
Pedro J.
Del Nido1,
Paul
Glynn1,
Percival
Buenaventura1,
Guy
Salama2, and
Alan P.
Koretsky3
1 Department of Cardiac
Surgery, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115;
2 Department of Cell Biology and
Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh
15261; and 3 Department of
Biological Sciences, Science and Technology Center for Light
Microscopy and Biotechnology, and the Pittsburgh NMR Center for
Biomedical Research, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15213
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ABSTRACT |
Surface
fluorescence spectroscopy of the beating heart to measure cytosolic
calcium has been limited by the need to use ultraviolet excitation
light for many of the commonly used calcium indicators. Ultraviolet
light in the heart produces a high level of background fluorescence and
is highly absorbed, limiting tissue penetration. Visible wavelength
fluorescence dyes such as rhod 2 are available; however, the lack of
spectral shift with calcium binding precludes the use of ratio
techniques to account for changes in cytosolic dye concentration. We
have developed a method for in vivo quantitation of cytosolic rhod 2 concentration that in conjunction with calcium-dependent fluorescence
measurements permits estimation of cytosolic calcium levels in perfused
rabbit hearts. Reflective absorbance of excitation light by rhod 2 loaded into myocardium was used as an index of dye concentration and
the ratio of fluorescence intensity to absorbance as a measure of
cytosolic calcium concentration. Endothelial cell loading of rhod 2 was
found to be minimal (<5%), and dye leak rate out of the cytosol was
slow, with ~5% loss of dye fluorescence occurring between 10 and 30 min after dye loading. Rhod 2 loading into subcellular compartments,
determined by manganese quenching, was also minimal (<5%). The
dissociation constant of rhod 2 for calcium was measured in vitro to be
500 nM, and this value increased to 710 nM in the presence of 0.5 mM
myoglobin. On the basis of this value and in vivo fluorescence
measurements, cytosolic calcium concentration in the rabbit heart was
found to be 229 ± 90 nM at end diastole and 930 ± 130 nM at
peak systole, with peak fluorescence preceding peak ventricular
pressure by ~40 ms. This technique should facilitate detailed
analysis of calcium transients from the whole heart.
cytosolic calcium; reflectance spectroscopy; surface fluorometry; calcium indicators
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INTRODUCTION |
FLUOROMETRY OF biological tissues to measure cytosolic
calcium (Cai) has been greatly
facilitated by the introduction of fluorescent dyes with greater
quantum efficiency and by the development of simpler techniques for
introducing the dyes into the cytosol (15). The higher quantum
efficiency has permitted studies of
Cai with relatively low
intracellular dye concentrations so that there is little if any
calcium-buffering effects. Quantitation of free Cai concentrations has also been
facilitated by the fact that many of these dyes exhibit either an
excitation or an emission spectral shift when binding calcium. Thus
Cai can be estimated independent
of intracellular dye concentration using ratio techniques (29).
Whole tissue surface fluorometry to measure
Cai has been substantially more
difficult than single cell because several additional factors can
affect fluorescence measurements that are independent of calcium
concentration. This is particularly true in the heart. Some of these
factors include the following: 1)
inner filter effects caused by the tissue that can change depending on
the physiological status of the heart, particularly when using
excitation light in the ultraviolet region (14, 20);
2) changes in excitation light or
detection efficiency due to scattering or motion associated with the
contractile action of the heart (motion artifact) (20); 3) the heterogeneous nature of heart
tissue can lead to loading of dye into cells other than myocytes, such
as endothelial or smooth muscle cells (26); and
4) background fluorescence from endogenous fluorophores such as pyridine nucleotides can be large and
can change depending on the physiological status of the heart.
The two most commonly used calcium-sensitive fluorescent dyes, fura 2 and indo 1, require excitation light in the ultraviolet range
(340-380 nm), and particularly with indo 1, endothelial cell
loading can account for as much as 30% of the detected surface fluorescence (25). Various techniques have been developed to minimize
the other potential problems with these dyes in whole organ
fluorometry, including the use of isosbestic wavelengths for the heart
for fluorescence detection to correct for oxygenation-dependent changes
in tissue filtration (14, 20), immobilization of the heart
and/or use of a calcium-insensitive fluorescence reference to
suppress motion artifact (20), and hypothermic (30°C) perfusion with or without anion transport inhibitors to decrease the rate of dye
leakage out of the cell (7, 29). Even with these measures, limited
tissue penetration of the ultraviolet excitation light restricts
calcium-sensitive fluorescence detection to the outermost surface layer
of the heart.
Recently, calcium-sensitive fluorescent dyes that absorb light
substantially farther into the visible range have been developed. These
fluorescent dyes, including Calcium Green and rhod 2 (12, 38, 39), have
a substantial advantage over indo 1 and fura 2 in that the excitation
light required is at visible wavelengths between 500 and 600 nm, where
filtering of excitation or emitted light by the tissue and
autofluorescence is minimal. The changes in fluorescence upon calcium
binding are high. For example, there is a 100-fold increase in
fluorescence when rhod 2 goes from its calcium-free form to its
calcium-bound form. Therefore, the fluorescence signal-to-autofluorescence ratio can be very favorable. The one disadvantage of these dyes, however, is the distinct lack of a significant spectral shift in either excitation or fluorescence spectra
with calcium binding. This feature precludes the use of ratio
techniques as they are usually performed. To solve this problem, we
have developed a method for in vivo quantitation of cytosolic rhod 2 concentration in conjunction with calcium-dependent fluorescence
measurements which permits the estimation of
Cai levels using the dissociation
constant (Kd)
of rhod 2 measured in vitro. The idea is to measure the absorbance of
the dye along with the fluorescence. In the case of rhod 2, the
absorbance spectrum is independent of calcium concentration, whereas
the fluorescence emission increases with increasing calcium. Therefore,
the rhod 2 fluorescence quantum efficiency changes upon binding
calcium. Determination of fluorescence and absorbance from the heart is a measure of quantum efficiency. The ratio of fluorescence to absorbance should account for changes in dye concentration. Whole tissue reflectance spectroscopy was used as a measure of the amount of
dye loading in the cytosol, and also to minimize motion artifact. Isosbestic wavelengths for the heart were used for both excitation and
emission detection to minimize any changes in tissue filtration due to
oxygenation state.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate this method of whole tissue
surface spectroscopy using the calcium-sensitive dye rhod 2 and to
detect beat-to-beat Cai transients
in an isolated rabbit heart preparation during inotropic manipulation
of the contractile state.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Isolated perfused heart preparation.
Hearts from adult (1-2 yr old) New Zealand White rabbits (heart
weight 6-7 g) were obtained after the animals had been
anesthetized with ketamine (50 mg/kg) and given heparin sodium (200 U/kg) intravenously or intraperitoneally. Once the hearts were excised,
they were placed in a 10°C perfusate bath, and the aorta was
cannulated for coronary artery perfusion with a 1.5-mm metal cannula.
Hearts were then perfused with Krebs-Ringer solution at 37°C, pH
7.4, containing (in mM) 115 NaCl, 1.25 CaCl2, 4.7 KCl, 11.0 glucose, 1.8 MgCl2, 1.8 KHPO4, 26 NaHCO3, 10 U/l regular insulin;
the solution was gassed with 95%
O2-5%
CO2. Hearts were perfused via the
aortic cannula in a retrograde manner for a 30-min stabilization period at an aortic root pressure of 80 mmHg. A latex balloon was inserted into the left ventricular cavity and connected to a catheter-tipped pressure transducer (Millar). The mitral valve was incised to render it
incompetent, and a balloon flange was fixed to the valve to prevent
herniation or extrusion. Developed pressure was measured and acquired
simultaneously with the fluorescence measurements to permit comparisons
of phase relationships between these two parameters. The amplified
signal from the pressure transducer was connected to an auxiliary port
on the SLM 8000 fluorescence spectrometer (SLM Aminco, Springfield,
IL), digitized at 1,000 Hz, and stored on magnetic disks using the SLM
data acquisition software.
Rhod 2 loading.
Rhod 2 was loaded into cells by perfusing the heart at 37°C, with
the cell-permeant acetoxymethyl ester (AM) form (Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR) dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) in a recirculating
manner for 5 min followed by a washout period to eliminate any
unhydrolyzed dye. One milligram of rhod 2 dissolved in 1 ml anhydrous
DMSO was used as a stock solution for dye loading, and aliquots of dye
(0.3-1 mg) were added to 100 ml of perfusate to make up the
recirculating circuit. This procedure led to rhod 2 fluorescence that
was 10- to 15-fold higher than background. Similar loading was observed
with rhod 2 dissolved in ethanol. In later experiments, the aliquot of
dye was infused over a 1-min period without recirculation, and an
equivalent result was obtained. Developed pressure was monitored during
the loading and washout period. Typically, there was a 30-50%
decline in developed pressure during rhod 2 loading, followed by
complete recovery within 5 min of switching off the recirculating
circuit with all the dye concentrations used, except for the highest
dose tested (1 mg rhod 2), where there was 80-90% recovery after
5 min.
Internal fluorescence standard loading.
To quantify the effects of contractile motion (motion artifact) on the
fluorescence emission signal and determine the phase relationship
between motion artifact and the intracavitary pressure measurements, an
internal fluorescence standard was used in a separate group of hearts
(20). 5(6)-Carboxy-2',7'-dichlorofluorescein (ClCF;
Molecular Probes), a fluorescent dye whose fluorescence does not change
under physiological conditions, was loaded into hearts using the
cell-permeant form with a recirculating circuit in a similar method as
that of rhod 2 loading. After a 15-min washout period, fluorescence and
reflectance measurements were made using the same excitation and
emission wavelengths as with rhod 2. The same perfusion protocol used
in the rhod 2 experiments was also used for the internal standard
studies.
Spectroscopic measurements: optical perfusion chamber.
For all spectroscopic measurements, the hearts were perfused in a
fluid-sealed chamber specially designed to
1) minimize movement artifacts,
2) abate the curvature of the
epicardium, and 3) maintain physiological conditions (13, 34). The chamber was built in house (at
the machine shop of the University of Pittsburgh, Department of Cell
Biology and Physiology); it consisted of a front frame equipped with a
1-mm-thick optical window (sapphire, Oriel, Stratford, CT) that made
contact with the left ventricular free wall (34). The perfusion chamber
was equipped with ports for a perfusion cannula, an intracavitary
balloon, and pacing wires. Small plungers that fix the heart in three
directions against the optical window minimized heart motion. NADH
surface fluorescence to detect ischemia in hearts fixed inside
the chamber in this manner was done. Immobilization of the heart
against the optical window, as described, yielded no detectable change
in NADH-dependent fluorescence emission (467 nm) intensity with 340-nm
excitation light, indicating that the left ventricular surface was not
made ischemic by this maneuver.
The excitation light beam was focused on the surface of the heart by a
biconvex lens to provide a 5-mm excitation spot. A large beam of
excitation light (5 mm) was used to permit integration over a large
surface area of the heart. The emission fluorescence light was
collected with a biconvex lens positioned at 90° to the incident
excitation light beam. The emission wavelength was selected by a
motorized monochromator and detected by a cooled photomultiplier tube
(Fig.
1A,
PMT-A) (Aminco SLM 8000).

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Fig. 1.
A: schematic of fluorimeter and
optical perfusion chamber positioned inside sample compartment of
SLM-8000 (horizontal plane). Perfusion chamber is mounted on a plate by
adjustable bolts that permit rotation and elevation. Incident beam is
focused on surface of optical window (60°), and emission light is
collected at 30° from optical window surface.
B: position of liquid light guide and
focusing lens (L) used to collect reflected light, viewed on a vertical
plane. PMT, photomultiplier tube; EX SPEC, excitation monochromator; EM
SPEC, emission monochromator; L, collimating lens and holder.
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Reflected excitation light was collected by a third biconvex lens
focused onto a flexible liquid light guide (Oriel) coupled to a second
photomultiplier tube (PMT-C). The light guide and focusing lens were
positioned at 45° on a vertical plane, from the optical window and
plane of incident excitation light (see Fig.
1B). A vertical plane was chosen to
minimize the signal from the light reflected by the air-optical window
and window-tissue interface (spectral reflection) and therefore
increase the relative signal from the excitation light backscattered by
the heart tissue itself. This backscatter reflectance signal was used
to quantify dye loading into the myocardium and to correct for the
effects of motion. Similarly, the perfusion chamber with optical window was positioned with a 30° angle of incidence (horizontal plane) to
the excitation beam (see Fig. 1A).
This angle for the perfusion chamber minimized the reflected excitation
light from the air-window and window-tissue interfaces that was seen by
the fluorescence emission detector (PMT-C). We have found that
positioning of the perfusion chamber and light collectors to minimize
the optical window spectral reflectivity was important for obtaining
adequate fluorescence and tissue back-scatter signals.
Fluorescence measurements.
After dye loading, a washout period of nonrecirculating perfusion was
done for up to 1 h to establish the time required to achieve relative
steady state for unhydrolyzed dye washout and to determine the rate of
dye leak out of the tissue. Excitation light at 524 nm with emission
light at 589 nm was used for the fluorescence measurements. Although
maximal light absorption by rhod 2 is at 554 nm, these two wavelengths
were chosen for the tissue fluorescence measurements since they have
been shown to be isosbestic for heart absorbance and therefore tissue
filtration effects due to changes in oxygenation state are minimized
(14). Instantaneous ratio of the fluorescence emission (589 nm, PMT-A) over the reflected excitation light (524 nm, PMT-C) was done
electronically in an effort to correct the fluorescence signal for any
changes due to heart motion. The fluorescence emission and reflectance signals were averaged over 40 ms, digitized, and stored continuously for periods up to 40 s. Averaging the fluorescence signal for 40 ms was
done to optimize signal-to-dark noise ratio. With an average heart rate
of 2 Hz, the 40-ms acquisition rate provided ~12 data points during a
single cardiac cycle. Averaging the fluorescence signal for shorter
periods (10-30 ms) can be done to obtain more data points during
the cardiac cycle with a lower signal-to-dark noise ratio. The
background photon count obtained from the heart before dye loading was
subtracted from the dye-loaded fluorescence measurements. Calibration
of the maximum fluorescence emission signal was done by perfusing the
heart with 10 µM A-23187 or 10 µM digitonin.
Reflectance measurements.
Because rhod 2 has no spectral shift when it binds calcium, to quantify
calcium, we must account for changes in the dye concentration in the
tissue. To do this in the heart, back-scattered excitation light was
collected and measured by a separate PMT (PMT-C) as described above
(see Fig. 1). Relative dye concentration in the heart tissue was
determined by measuring the relative change in reflected light at two
wavelengths (524 and 589 nm, both isosbestic for the heart), before and
after dye loading. The excitation light wavelength was scanned from 500 to 600 nm (1 nm/s), and the reflected light was collected by PMT-C. The
524-nm excitation light was chosen because rhod 2 absorbs light
effectively at this wavelength, and 589 nm was chosen as a reference
wavelength because rhod 2 does not absorb light in that region and
reflectance at 589 nm is not affected by the oxygenation state of the
heart. The ratio of reflected light at 524 nm to 589 nm was used as an
index of dye concentration in the heart tissue. Calibration of the
reflectance signal was done by subtracting the reflectance spectra of
the heart without rhod 2 from the spectra of the rhod 2-loaded heart.
Dye absorbance in whole heart
(Arhod 2) was calculated using
the formula
|
(1)
|
where
I524 and
I589 is the reflectance intensity
at 524 and 589 nm excitation of the heart, respectively, before
(subscript o) and after (subscript rhod 2) dye loading. Reflectance
spectra were obtained every 5 min after dye loading, and additional
spectra were obtained between interventions described in the perfusion protocol. In a separate group of hearts, tissue reflectance spectra were obtained every 5 min in hearts perfused with buffer alone, without
dye, to determine the effects of the perfusion protocol on the native
reflectance characteristics of the heart tissue.
Calibration of the dye.
To calculate the in vitro
Kd for rhod 2 and
calcium, fluorescence measurements of standard concentrations of
calcium were made using the SLM 8000 spectrometer. Eleven samples of
varying calcium concentration (0-39.8 µM) and containing rhod 2 (10 µM) were prepared from two stock solutions of known calcium
concentration (calcium calibration buffer kit, Molecular Probes) using
the method of Tsien and Pozzan (37). A second set of identical samples, but with the addition of 0.5 mM myoglobin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), was
prepared, and fluorescence measurements were obtained. Myoglobin was
added to mimic some of the absorbance characteristics of myocardium and
the effects of proteins on the affinity of the dye for calcium. Fluorescence emission was collected from 540 to 600 nm, exciting at 524 nm.
Rhod 2 absorbance measurements were also performed in the SLM 8000 spectrometer by scanning excitation light from 500 to 600 nm across a
3-mm quartz cuvette containing 10 µM rhod 2 with and without calcium.
The transmitted light was collected directly across the cuvette by a
biconvex lens focused on a liquid light guide and detected by PMT-C.
These spectra were then compared with spectra obtained by reflectance
measurements from the surface of the heart tissue.
Calibration of the fluorescence emission signal from hearts was done by
obtaining fully calcium-bound fluorescence by perfusing with 10 µM
A-23187 or 10 µM digitonin. Fluorescence minimum was assumed to be
equal to background based on the very low fluorescence of calcium-free
rhod 2 observed in the in vitro experiments.
Calculation of Cai concentration in
whole heart.
Cai was calculated using the
following equation (22)
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(2)
|
where
Kd is the
dissociation coefficient for rhod 2 and calcium (obtained from in vitro
calibration with rhod 2 + myoglobin) and is equal to 710 nM,
Ft is the fluorescence of the rhod 2-loaded heart at time t,
Fmax is maximum fluorescence of the rhod 2-loaded heart in the presence of 10 µM ionomycin or digitonin, and Fo = Fb + a(Fmax
Fb), where
Fb is the background counts from
the heart before dye loading and a is
rhod 2 fluorescence in the absence of calcium/rhod 2 fluorescence in
the presence saturating calcium. For rhod 2, the value of
a is approximately zero (see Fig.
2); thus for rhod 2, Fo was assumed to be equal to
Fb.

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Fig. 2.
Fluorescence emission spectra of rhod 2 (0.1 µM) in an
aqueous phosphate-buffered solution (pH 7.00, 37°C, magnesium 1 mM) with varying calcium concentration (0-39.8 µM) in presence
(A) or absence (B) of 0.5 mM myoglobin.
Excitation was at 524 nm.
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To account for changes in dye concentration during fluorescence
measurements, Eq. 2 was modified to
include changes in absorbance due to dye leakage,
Arhod 2 (see Eq. 1). Thus Eq. 2
becomes
|
(3)
|
where At is the dye
absorbance, Arhod 2, in the
dye-loaded heart at time t, and
Amax is the dye absorbance, Arhod 2, in the heart measured
just before ionomycin or digitonin administration.
Equation 3 can be further simplified to yield
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(4)
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Determination of dye loading into subcellular organelles.
To determine the extent of uptake of rhod 2 by subcellular organelles,
quenching of dye fluorescence by manganese was used (28). Hearts loaded
with rhod 2 were perfused with Krebs buffer containing 100 µM
MnCl2 for 30 min. The ionophore
A-23187 (10 µM) was then added to the perfusate containing manganese
(200 µM), and perfusion was continued for an additional 30 min. To determine whether dye was still present in the myocardium, a bolus of
CaCl2 (10% solution) containing
A-23187 was then infused into the heart, and perfusion was stopped. In
an additional three hearts, ruthenium red (24 µM) was added to the
perfusate for 15 min before the manganese infusion and was continued
throughout the ionophore and calcium infusions. Dye-dependent
fluorescence and left ventricular pressure were recorded simultaneously
during the entire infusion period in both groups of hearts.
The extent of fluorescence quenching of rhod 2 by manganese was
determined in vitro in a cuvette containing a solution of 10 µM rhod
2 (free acid), 150 mM KCl, 30 mM NaCl, 1 mM
MgSO4, and 48 mM
CaCl2 at 37°C. Manganese
concentrations were varied from 0 to 15 mM, maintaining the same final
volume of 3 ml.
Distribution of rhod 2 in myocytes.
Guinea pigs of either sex (250-450 g) were injected with heparin
sodium (1,000 U ip) and Nembutal (300 mg/kg). Once the animals were
anesthetized, the heart was removed and perfused with oxygenated N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic
acid (HEPES)-buffered saline solution (HBSS) containing (in mM) 135 NaCl, 1 MgCl2, 10 HEPES, 4 KCl,
and 0 CaCl2, pH 7.2, at 36 ± 2°C in a Langendorff perfusion apparatus. After 7 min, the
perfusate was switched to HBSS containing 1 mg/ml collagenase (type II,
Worthington) and 0.1 mg/ml pronase (Sigma). After 8-10 min, the
enzyme solution was replaced by HBSS containing 0.2 mM
CaCl2 for 5 min, then the heart
was removed, minced, and triturated. Cells were filtered through a
100-µm nylon mesh and allowed to settle by gravity in a tube
containing HBSS with 0.2 mM CaCl2.
After 20 min, the supernatant was removed, and the cells were
resuspended in HBSS with 1.0 mM CaCl2. Myocytes were plated on
poly-L-lysine-coated coverslips and were used within 8 h.
Myocytes on coverslips were incubated with rhod 2-AM (5 µM) for
15-20 min either at room temperature (23°C) or in an incubator at 37°C, then were washed twice with dye-free solution.
Alternatively, myocytes were incubated in HBSS containing 10 nM
tetramethylrhodamine ethyl ester (TMRE), a probe that accumulates in
the mitochondria as a function of mitochondrial potential. Myocytes
loaded with rhod 2 or incubated with TMRE were examined with a laser
scan confocal microscope to compare the distribution of rhod 2 with that of TMRE. Fluorescence images taken at excitation wavelength equal
to 514 nm and emission wavelength >550 nm were obtained at seven
longitudinal focal planes to select a plane below the cellular membrane
rich in mitochondria. Possible errors due to nonspecific binding of
TMRE were evaluated by collapsing the mitochondrial potential with the
proton ionophore carbonyl cyanide
p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP),
which in principle should decrease the voltage-dependent accumulation
of TMRE in the mitochondria. Similarly, possible voltage-dependent
accumulation of rhod 2 in the mitochondria was evaluated by imaging the
myocytes before and after the addition of FCCP. Nonspecific
interactions of rhod 2 with intracellular compartments were evaluated
by permeabilizing the cell membrane with the detergent digitonin to
disperse a freely soluble form of rhod 2 while residual bound rhod 2 would be retained in the myocytes.
Perfusion protocol.
After dye loading and 15 min of washout with Krebs-Ringer buffer, a
group of hearts (n = 5) was treated
with bradykinin (0.1-nmol bolus) and calcium chloride (0.25-mg bolus)
sequentially with a 10-min recovery period between each intervention.
Fluorescence emission and reflectance measurements were made during
administration of each agent, and complete reflectance spectra were
obtained before and after each intervention. At the end of the
perfusion protocol, 10 µM A-23187 or 10 µM digitonin was given to
the hearts to obtain maximum fluorescence measurements. Minimum
fluorescence was assumed to be at the level of background fluorescence,
obtained before dye loading.
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RESULTS |
Figure 2B shows the fluorescence emission spectra of an
aqueous solution containing 0.1 µM rhod 2 and varying calcium
concentrations from 0 to 38.9 µM. On the basis of these measurements,
the Kd of rhod 2 for calcium was calculated to be 500 nM (pH 7.00, 37°C, 1 mM
magnesium). To a second solution containing the same ionic composition,
dye was added to 0.5 mM myoglobin to determine the effects of this
protein on calcium-dependent fluorescence and Kd. The results
are shown in Fig. 2A. The presence of
myoglobin resulted in a small red shift in fluorescence, and the
Kd for rhod 2 and
calcium was calculated to be 710 nM. This latter value was used to
quantitate calcium in the heart.
Figure 3 shows the fluorescence spectra
obtained from a heart before (A) and
15 min after (B) loading with rhod
2-AM (0.5 mg). Spectrum C in Fig. 3 is
the corrected spectrum (obtained by subtracting
spectrum A from
spectrum B) from the rhod 2-loaded heart. Note that similar to the myoglobin-containing solution in vitro,
the fluorescence maxima of rhod 2 in the heart is shifted slightly to
the red (585 nm) when compared with the free dye alone in solution (579 nm).

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Fig. 3.
Fluorescence emission spectra obtained from surface of heart.
A: perfused heart alone after 30 min
of perfusion with Krebs buffer. B:
heart loaded with rhod 2 acetoxymethyl ester (AM) (0.5 mg) and after 15 min of dye washout. C: corrected
emission (B A) from rhod 2-loaded heart.
Excitation was at 524 nm.
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The in vitro absorbance spectra for rhod 2 in an aqueous solution is
shown in Fig. 4 in the presence of
saturating calcium (1 mM) and myoglobin (0.5 mM). We measured the
effects of calcium concentration on absorbance of rhod 2 and found that
there was no change in the absorbance spectra of the dye in the
presence or absence of calcium. However, the addition of 0.5 mM
myoglobin to the cuvette did affect the spectra significantly,
particularly in the region of 500-550 nm, where myoglobin
absorption is greater. Spectrum A in
Fig. 4 is the absorbance spectra of a solution containing 0.5 mM
myoglobin alone, and spectrum B in
Fig. 4 is the spectrum of myoglobin plus rhod 2 (0.1 µM). By
subtracting the absorption due to myoglobin (spectrum
A) from the absorption spectrum of the dye plus
myoglobin solution (spectrum B),
however, we were able to obtain an absorption spectrum that was
identical to that of dye alone (spectrum
C). This is evidence that the myoglobin effects on
the fluorescence and absorbance spectra are due to an inner filter
effect.

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Fig. 4.
Absorbance spectra of rhod 2 in aqueous solution in presence of
myoglobin. A: absorbance spectrum of
myoglobin (0.5 mM) in solution. B:
absorbance spectrum of myoglobin plus rhod 2 (0.1 µM) in solution.
C: difference spectrum
(B A).
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To determine the effects of wavelength on tissue penetration in the
heart, the optical density (OD) of a perfused rabbit right ventricular
free wall (~2 mm thick) was measured. At 340 and 380 nm (i.e., indo 1 and fura 2 excitation), the OD was found to be 3.86 and 3.92, respectively. At 480 nm, the OD was 3.2. At the rhod 2 excitation
wavelength (520 nm), OD was 3.0, and at 585 nm, OD was 2.8.
Reflectance spectra obtained from the heart with and without rhod 2 were obtained by scanning excitation wavelength and collecting the
back-scattered light from the tissue (Fig.
5, top).
Corrected reflective absorbance of light by rhod 2 loaded into a heart
is shown in Fig. 5, bottom
(spectrum B). This spectrum was
obtained by plotting log
Io/Irhod 2,
where Io is the reflectance spectrum of the heart without dye and
Irhod 2 is the spectrum of the
same heart after dye loading and 15 min of dye washout. The absorption
spectrum of rhod 2 alone in a cuvette is superimposed for purposes of
comparison (Fig. 5, bottom,
spectrum A). Note that in the heart,
there is a red shift in peak dye absorption and increased absorption at
520 nm when compared with dye in a cuvette. We did not observe any
further changes in the in vivo absorbance spectra
(Io/Irhod 2)
during the entire washout or perfusion protocol period.

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Fig. 5.
Top: reflective absorbance spectrum
obtained from a heart before (a) and
15 min after (b) loading with rhod
2. Bottom, A:
absorbance spectrum of rhod 2 in aqueous solution.
B: reflective absorbance spectrum of
rhod 2 obtained from a heart 15 min after dye loading (difference
spectra of heart before and after rhod 2 loading).
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The effects of the washout period on rhod 2 fluorescence, absorbance,
and fluorescence/absorbance in a whole heart are shown in Fig.
6. Fluorescence emission (F) was obtained
by exciting at 524 nm and detecting emission at 589 nm. Corrected
reflective absorbance (dye absorbance, A) was calculated by obtaining
the ratio of reflected light at 524 nm (dye sensitive) over 589 nm (dye
insensitive) before and after dye loading. Figure 6 shows Arhod 2 (see Eq. 1) plotted as a function of washout time after
initial dye loading (note that the scale shown is truncated). The rate
of decline of dye-dependent absorbance reached a steady rate by
10-15 min of dye-free Krebs-Ringer perfusion of the heart. Fluorescence intensity declined in a parallel manner to absorbance during the washout period. From 10 min after loading to 30 min, there
was a 20% drop in fluorescence and a 12% drop in absorbance. Calculating the ratio of fluorescence over absorbance (F/A), we observed approximately a 5% change in this value from 10 min after dye
loading to 30 min. On the basis of these observations, interventions aimed at altering Cai, described
in the perfusion protocol, were started after 15 min of dye washout.

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Fig. 6.
Effects of dye washout with Krebs buffer on reflective absorbance and
fluorescence emission in a heart given a bolus with rhod 2-AM (0.5 mg)
at time 0. F, fluorescence emission (excitation, 524 nm;
emission, 589 nm); A, reflective absorbance (reflected light at 524 nm/589 nm before and after dye loading); F/A, ratio of fluorescence
intensity over reflective absorbance obtained at same time point. (All
values expressed as percentage of value obtained 3 min after dye bolus.
Note that scale is truncated.)
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|
To determine optimal dye-loading concentration techniques for the whole
heart, experiments were done loading rhod 2-AM into isolated nonworking
rabbit hearts (n = 3) using either a
150-ml recirculating circuit containing buffered perfusate with dye or the esterified form of the dye was dissolved in DMSO and injected as a
bolus over 1 min directly into the perfusion tubing without recirculation. We found no difference between the two dye-loading techniques with respect to decline in developed pressure during loading
or recovery after 5 min of washout. There was also no difference in the
increase of fluorescence (10-15 times autofluorescence) or the
morphology of the calcium transients with equivalent dye loads. To
further ascertain the optimal dose of esterified dye, incremental
boluses of rhod 2-AM were administered to the heart ranging from 0.3 to
1 mg, measuring the increase in fluorescence vs. dye-dependent
absorption as well as recovery of contractile function after 15 min of
dye washout. We found that between 0.3 and 0.7 mg of esterified dye
bolus, there was a linear relationship between the rise in fluorescence
and absorption, Arhod 2 (data not
shown). However, when loading the heart with larger doses of dye
(>0.7 mg), developed pressure did not recover with washout to
preloading levels, and the relationship between fluorescence and
absorbance was no longer linear. This change could be due to a change
in Cai from buffering by rhod 2, loading of subcellular compartments in the myocytes with the larger dye
bolus, or the dye concentration reached a level where Beer's law no
longer holds. Therefore, a loading dose of 0.5-0.7 mg dye ester
per rabbit heart (6-7 g) was used for the perfusion protocol
experiments.
To quantify the effects of contractile motion (motion artifact), the
fluorescence emission signal was acquired over several cardiac cycles
from hearts loaded with the internal fluorescence standard ClCF (Fig.
7). Surface fluorescence signal
(top) was superimposed on the
simultaneous left ventricular pressure signal obtained from the
intracavitary balloon (bottom). The
effects of immobilization of the heart by the perfusion chamber are
demonstrated when the heart was allowed to rotate free and away from
the optical window (Fig. 7A) and
lightly pressed against the window (Fig. 7B). Note that with the heart moving
freely, fluorescence changes are gradual, and peak fluorescence occurs
exactly at mid-diastole (180° out of phase) with intracavitary
pressure. With the heart immobilized against the optical window, there
was a marked decrease in the amplitude of the fluorescence signal
during the cardiac cycle from 12 to 4% of total fluorescence, and
these fluctuations became random with no obvious phase correlation with
the left ventricular pressure signal.

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Fig. 7.
Fluorescence emission (top trace)
and left ventricular pressure (bottom
trace) obtained simultaneously from hearts loaded
with internal fluorescence standard
5(6)-carboxy-2',7'-dichlorofluorescein.
A: heart positioned away from optical
window and allowed to move freely. B:
heart lightly pressed against optical window and fixed in place by
positioners of perfusion chamber.
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Fluorescence quenching of rhod 2 by manganese measured in vitro is
shown in a representative titration experiment (Fig.
8C). Increasing concentrations of manganese dropped fluorescence to 23 ± 3% (n = 4) of the intensity obtained
from rhod 2 in the presence of
CaCl2. Manganese was therefore
unable to completely quench rhod 2 fluorescence in vitro. In the heart,
the extent of rhod 2 uptake by subcellular organelles was determined by
manganese infusion (100 µM) followed by the addition of the ionophore
A-23187. Within 5 min of the start of the
MnCl2 infusion, fluorescence from
the heart fell to <50% of the premanganese fluorescence, and the
amplitude of the fluorescence transient decreased to the levels seen
before loading rhod 2, i.e., autofluorescence (Fig. 8A). Simultaneous left ventricular
pressure remained essentially unchanged during the rapid fall in
fluorescence, indicating that the manganese infusion had little effect
on cardiac function (Fig. 8B). By 30 min of manganese infusion, fluorescence had fallen to 36 ± 3%
(n = 3) of premanganese fluorescence.
The addition of 10 µM A-23187 to the perfusate containing 200 µM
MnCl2 had no significant effect on
fluorescence emission from the heart (35 ± 2% of premanganese
fluorescence). The bolus of CaCl2
(10% solution) given after 30 min of infusion with manganese and the ionophore caused a threefold rise in fluorescence from the heart, indicating that rhod 2 was still present in the myocardium (data not
shown). Ruthenium red, due to its absorption of excitation light,
caused a significant drop in rhod 2 fluorescence before manganese
infusion but had no further effects on the relative change in
fluorescence with manganese or A-23187.

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Fig. 8.
A: fluorescence emission from heart at
onset (I), after 15 min (II), after 30 min (III) of
MnCl2 (100 µM) infusion, and 15 min after perfusion with manganese and A-23187 (IV).
B: left ventricular (LV) pressure (in
mmHg) measured simultaneously at onset of manganese infusion (I).
C: calcium-associated rhod 2 fluorescence emission measured in vitro at different
MnCl2 concentrations.
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To further address the possibility that calcium transients measured
with rhod 2-loaded hearts might originate from the sum of mitochondrial
and cytosolic Ca2+ transients
occurring on a beat-to-beat basis, isolated myocytes loaded with rhod
2-AM or TMRE were imaged by confocal microscopy, and the distribution
of fluorescence was compared (Fig. 9).
Confocal images of dye distribution in myocytes showed that rhod 2 (loaded at either 23 or 37°C) is primarily located in the cytosol,
and the distribution of rhod 2 fluorescence is different from that produced by the mitochondrial-specific dye TMRE.

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Fig. 9.
Distribution of rhod 2 in isolated myocytes. Top
panels: myocytes bathed in 10 nM tetramethylrhodamine
ethyl ester (TMRE) accumulated potentiometric probe in cytosol. For
myocytes with a resting potential of 80 mV, TMRE concentration
in cytosol would be ~200 nM, and for a mitochondrial potential of
120 mV, intramitochondrial concentration of TMRE would be 20 µM based on Nernst equilibrium for TMRE. Top left
panel shows distribution of TMRE in cell and reveals
typical punctate appearance of mitochondrial-specific dyes, indicating
that TMRE accumulates in mitochondria. Nucleus appears as a dark
ellipse in middle and to right of cell; some regions are fainter than
others because these mitochondria are not situated in same focal plane.
Top right panel shows same cell after
addition of carbonyl cyanide
p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP)
to collapse mitochondrial potential. As expected, TMRE accumulation in
mitochondria disappeared within 5 min. Middle
panels: myocytes were loaded with rhod 2-AM for 15 min
at 23°C and washed with dye-free solution. Rhod 2 in cell did not
produce punctate appearance but was rather homogeneously distributed in
cell (middle left panel); addition
of FCCP (10 µM) to same cell did not produce significant changes in
dye distribution. Bottom panels: to
evaluate possibility that rhod 2 accumulation in mitochondria would not
be visible because of high background of cytosolic dye, myocytes were
loaded with rhod 2 for 15 min then washed with dye-free solution. In
presence of 1 mM extracellular calcium, rhod 2 distribution still did
not reveal a punctate appearance typical of dye accumulation in
mitochondria (next to last panel).
Subsequent switch to 2 µM extracellular
Ca2+ and addition of digitonin
produced an extensive loss of rhod 2 from cell with no significant
level of dye trapped in mitochondria (bottom
panel). (A pseudocolor scale is used to calibrate
fluorescence intensity of dyes. Calibration bars are 5 µm in length.)
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|
Figure 9, top panel, illustrates the
fluorescence of a myocyte bathed with TMRE in the absence
(left) and presence of FCCP (right). TMRE rapidly accumulated in
the mitochondria (10-15 min) and exhibited the typical punctate
pattern associated with mitochondria aligned in myocytes below the
surface membrane (8). The collapse of transmitochondrial membrane
potential (
) resulted in a dramatic decrease in TMRE
fluorescence (n = 8) as previously
reported by Loew et al. (23). Figure 9,
middle, illustrates the fluorescence images obtained from myocytes loaded with rhod 2 at 23°C. Rhod 2-loaded myocytes produced a very different dye distribution (Fig. 9,
middle) as the punctate pattern of
mitochondria was not apparent. The subsequent addition of FCCP had no
effect on rhod 2 fluorescence (n = 8).
To exclude the possibility that some rhod 2 diffused into mitochondria
and the high fluorescence intensity of the dye in the cytosol masked
the presence of dye in the mitochondria, rhod 2-loaded myocytes were
exposed to low concentrations of the detergent digitonin. As
illustrated in Fig. 9, bottom, rhod 2 loading again did not produce the punctate appearance typical of
mitochondrial stains (next to last bottom panel). The extracellular
free calcium concentration was reduced from 1 mM to 2 µM using
calcium-ethylene glycol-bis(
-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid-buffered solutions to ensure that the mitochondria would not be
exposed to high calcium levels which might collapse the mitochondrial
potential. Digitonin (20 µM) was then added to permeabilize the
surface membrane (but not the mitochondrial membrane). As expected,
rhod 2 trapped in the cytosol diffused out of the myocyte, and there
was no detectable level of rhod 2 after digitonin treatment
(n = 6). Furthermore, the cytosol and,
by inference, the mitochondria contained high levels of calcium (2 µM) such that any rhod 2 trapped in the mitochondria and
nondiffusible rhod 2 in the cytosol would fluoresce strongly and would
be readily detected as in the control panels.
Bradykinin has been shown to raise
Cai specifically in endothelial
cells and not in myocytes in whole heart preparations (25, 26). To
determine the degree of endothelial cell loading of rhod 2, the effects
of a bradykinin bolus (0.1 nmol) on left ventricular pressure and rhod
2 fluorescence were measured. The change in mean fluorescence was
<5% with bradykinin (Table 1 and Fig.
10A). In contrast, the 0.25-mg calcium chloride bolus caused a marked rise in
systolic pressure (~40-50 mmHg) and fluorescence (Table 1 and
Fig. 10B). This rise was followed by
a gradual decline with ventricular pressure recovering before the
fluorescence. The effects of 10 µM digitonin at the end of the
perfusion protocol are shown in Fig.
10C. Immediate contracture of the
heart was seen with an approximately fivefold rise in fluorescence.
Similar fluorescence rise was seen in hearts infused with the calcium
ionophore A-23187. A plateau in the fluorescence was seen in most
hearts after 30 s, and this value was used as the peak fluorescence for
the calibration calculations.

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Fig. 10.
Fluorescence emission (top) and
simultaneous left ventricular pressure
(bottom) from rhod 2-loaded hearts.
A: effects of bradykinin bolus (1 nmol). B: effects of calcium chloride
bolus (0.25 mg). C: effects of 10 µM
digitonin added to perfusate. Down arrow indicates start of infusion.
Fluorescence intensity expressed as percentage of mean fluorescence 5 s
before intervention.
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With the use of the fluorescence maxima value obtained with A-23187,
Cai concentration was determined
in a group of hearts loaded with rhod 2. Diastolic
Cai was calculated to be 229 ± 90 nM and systolic level of 930 ± 130 nM
(n = 4). This value was obtained using
fluorescence and absorbance measurements made 15 min after dye loading.
Figure 11 shows a calibrated calcium
fluorescence signal obtained from a beating heart loaded with rhod 2 (A) with the corresponding
intracavitary pressure signal (B).
Note the rapid upstroke of the calcium-dependent fluorescence during
systole with a gradual decline or shoulder during diastole. Peak
fluorescence preceded peak-developed pressure by ~40 ms.

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Fig. 11.
Calibrated calcium fluorescence signal obtained from a heart loaded
with rhod 2 (A) with corresponding
left ventricular pressure signal (B)
obtained simultaneously.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this investigation, we present a novel method for measuring
Cai in an isolated buffer-perfused
heart preparation, using the calcium-sensitive dye rhod 2. By combining
measurements of fluorescence emission corrected for dye leak by
absorbance measurements, we were able to estimate
Cai levels that vary between
229 ± 90 and 930 ± 130 nM during the cardiac cycle in
the isolated Krebs buffer-perfused rabbit heart. It is important to
note that these values were calculated using the background
fluorescence from the heart before dye loading as the minimum
fluorescence (Fo in Eq. 4) instead of the emission
intensity measured from the heart after manganese quenching. This is
based on our finding that manganese was only able to quench 77% of
rhod 2 fluorescence in vitro and 65% of the fluorescence in vivo (Fig.
8). Our calculated values correlate well with measurements of
Cai of whole rat heart made using
aequorin (333 ± 40 to 860 ± 110, respectively) (19); however, they correlate less well, particularly at peak systole, with values reported by Mohabir et al. (29) using indo 1 (315 ± 25 to 609 ± 29 nM).
Rhod 2 absorbs visible wavelength light in the range where tissue
absorbance and autofluorescence are low (500-600 nm). This is a
distinct advantage of rhod 2 over the more commonly used fluorescent
dyes (indo 1 and fura 2) which require ultraviolet excitation light
that is strongly absorbed by myocardium and consequently limit tissue
penetration and fluorescent emission intensity. Also, because of the
large change in quantum efficiency of rhod 2 upon binding calcium and
the favorable Kd
for calcium (710 nM in the presence of 0.5 mM myoglobin), a large
signal is obtained from calcium transients (30-50% of total
fluorescence, Fig. 11). Thus rhod 2 provides a much larger beat-to-beat
change in fluorescence than that seen with other dyes such as indo 1 and fura 2, permitting a more detailed evaluation of the different
components of the calcium transient.
The signal-to-noise ratio with the ultraviolet excitation dyes can be
an important problem particularly with a whole heart preparation where
motion during contraction can have a profound effect on the detected
signal (4). Several techniques have been employed to minimize the
effects of motion on the emission signal with these dyes, including
1) physical restriction of the heart
to limit its motion with respect to the light detectors, 2) using reflected (spectral) light
as a reference to ratio (32) or subtract (30) from the fluorescence
signal, or 3) using a fluorescence
standard (20) or ligand-insensitive emission wavelength (4) as the
reference signal to correct for motion. With the combination and
optimization of these techniques, motion artifact intensities of
2-3% of the total fluorescence have been achieved (4). However,
if the indicator fluorescence signal is weak, even this small a signal
from motion can account for ~10% of the fluctuations in
fluorescence. The fluorescence signal from motion would be expected to
be greatest during contractile transitions. Thus, with the large signal
obtained from rhod 2 fluorescence during systole, the effects of motion
are significantly reduced. Fluctuations in fluorescence with cardiac
contraction were in the range of 4-5% in beating hearts loaded
with the internal fluorescence standard ClCF (fluorescence independent
of calcium), as compared with 30-50% of total fluorescence from
hearts loaded with rhod 2.
Dye distribution among the different cell types in the heart also is a
potential source of error when attempting to measure myocyte calcium
(25). To detect the level of endothelial cell loading, bradykinin is
used since it has been shown to increase Cai in endothelial cells in a
transient manner. In our preparation, with rhod 2 loaded into the heart
at 37°C, we did not detect a significant rise in rhod 2 fluorescence with bradykinin (Fig. 10A). In contrast, there was a 150%
rise in fluorescence seen with the calcium chloride bolus (Fig.
10B). Therefore, any endothelial cell loading that may occur with rhod 2 is below our detectable level,
and thus the calcium signal detected from the heart appears to come
from myocytes.
The cellular distribution of rhod 2 and the lack of rhod 2 accumulation
in the mitochondria is key to the interpretation of the fluorescence
measurements and calculation of cytosolic free Ca2+. The effective quenching of
rhod 2 fluorescence (~80%) by manganese implies that most of the dye
is located in the cytosol (i.e., a manganese-accessible region). The
residual rhod 2 fluorescence detected in the presence of manganese is
not due to dye trapped in the mitochondria because rhod 2 might be
trapped in other subcellular organelles and because manganese is unable
to completely quench rhod 2 in the presence of calcium in the cellular
milieu. Moreover, manganese effectively blocked calcium transients,
implying that there is little rhod 2 in mitochondria, since
mitochondrial free calcium is also expected to oscillate on a
beat-to-beat basis (8, 35). More compelling evidence was provided by
confocal images of myocytes loaded with rhod 2-AM. A key criteria for
the discrimination of mitochondrial vs. cytosolic loading would be the
colocalization of TMRE, a mitochondrial potential probe, and of rhod 2. In Fig. 9, panels 1 and
4 demonstrate that rhod 2 localization is markedly different from that of TMRE, with rhod 2 exhibiting a
relatively homogeneous distribution and TMRE exhibiting the typical
punctate appearance of mitochondrial labels. The addition of the proton
uncoupler FCCP abolished the potential-dependent accumulation of TMRE
in the mitochondria, which indicated that the mitochondria of our
myocytes maintained a large negative potential and were metabolically
sound. In contrast, FCCP did not alter the rhod 2 fluorescence, as
expected irrespective of where the dye is located, as long as FCCP does
not produce calcium gradients across thc mitochondria. Although, Fig.
9, panels 3 and
4, shows that the rhod 2 fluorescence
emanates predominantly from the cytosol, the accumulation of rhod 2 in
the mitochondria could not be excluded. Figure 9,
panel 5, illustrates a myocyte that is
moderately loaded with rhod 2 and fluoresced less brightly and less
homogeneously (e.g., up to 100-fold gradient of intensity) as the cell
in Fig. 9, panel 3. In this case, the
appearance of fluorescence "bands" could be mistaken for
mitochondrial labeling instead of dye exclusion by the myofilaments,
which act as dye diffusion barriers. Treatment of such myocytes with
the detergent digitonin resulted in the complete loss of rhod 2 fluorescence (100-fold decrease in intensity) and with no residual
fluorescence in the cell (e.g., >3-fold shift in intensity across the
cell). Thus almost all the dye could diffuse out of digitonin-treated
cells, and little or no dye was trapped in the mitochondria.
Our findings contradict several reports that argue that the delocalized
positive charge of rhod 2-AM resulted in its selective accumulation in
mitochondria and was thus used to monitor mitochondrial free calcium in
a variety of cells (hepatocytes, Ref. 16; Chinese hamster ovary T
cells, Ref. 33; rat brain astrocytes, Ref. 17; rat chromaffin cells,
Ref. 2). Most studies used cell imaging to measure the cellular
localization of rhod 2 but did not use more stringent criteria such as
the colocalization of TMRE and rhod 2 or trapping rhod 2 in
mitochondria after detergent solubilization of the cell membrane or a
truly independent measurement of mitochondrial free calcium. In
isolated rat myocytes, the preliminary reports with rhod 2 have been
controversial. Sheu and Jou (36) indicated that rhod 2 monitored
mitochondrial calcium oscillation on a beat-to-beat basis. More
recently, Duchen et al. (11) argued for a more cautious interpretation
of rhod 2 signals because of a redistribution of dye from mitochondria
to cytosol upon the addition of FCCP. Interestingly, measurements of
Cai with other calcium indicator
dyes (e.g., fura 2, indo 1, fluo 3) have now been reappraised because a
substantial percentage of dye accumulates in the mitochondria of
myocytes (1, 8, 35). This implies that the delocalized positive charge
on rhod 2 may be considerably less important than the loading conditions, with respect to the dye's cellular distribution.
Thus rhod 2 in combination with the present loading conditions may provide more accurate measurements of
Cai compared with other calcium
indicators because of the small accumulation detected in subcellular
organelles.
Absolute quantitation of Cai using
rhod 2 in a whole heart preparation is the one aspect of this dye that
is complex. Because of the lack of spectral shift in absorbance or
fluorescence with calcium binding, a measure of the cytosolic dye
concentration and a measure of maximum fluorescence under saturated
conditions is required to calculate the calcium concentration.
Transmission of light across a tissue has been used to quantitate other
dyes, including fura red in frog skeletal muscle (21). In the present study, reflected absorbance was used to correct for changes in dye
concentration. Reflected light from an opaque substance contains two
components; one is the specular component, or light reflected directly
from the surface, and the other is the diffuse, which is a consequence
of multiple internal reflections within the tissue and is, in part, a
function of the absorbance characteristics of the tissue (3, 6, 31).
For our purposes, we sought to minimize the specular component and
optimize the back-scattered diffuse component, which contains
information relating to tissue absorbance. To achieve this, the
location of the reflectance detector becomes important, since the
direction of spectrally reflected light is determined by the direction
of the incident beam with respect to the reflective surface. Thus the
reference detector should be positioned to optimize the collection of
diffuse or back-scattered light (18).
In our experiments, we used the reflectance spectrum of the heart
before dye loading as a reference, which was subtracted from subsequent
spectra obtained after dye loading. The observation that the resultant
difference spectrum closely resembles the absorbance spectrum of rhod 2 obtained from a cuvette in the presence of myoglobin (Fig. 5) supports
our contention that changes in the corrected reflectance measurements
are directly related to rhod 2 concentration. Furthermore, the
correction factor obtained by this method appears to account for
changes in dye concentration as evidenced by the observation that in a
beating heart, calcium-dependent rhod 2 fluorescence measurements
remained relatively stable during the 30-min observation period (Fig.
6). Exact quantitation of rhod 2 concentration in the heart, however,
requires defining the path length of the reflected light (10, 18). This
is most often accomplished by time-resolved spectroscopic analysis of the reflected light (9). For our purposes, the estimation of dye
concentration and relative changes that occur during the experimental protocol provide a method of estimating
Cai concentration in a whole heart
model using a fluorescent dye that provides a sufficiently robust
signal permitting detailed analysis of the calcium transients.
To obtain a measure of the maximum rhod 2 fluorescence under
calcium-saturated conditions, we used A-23187 and digitonin. We found
the use of digitonin troublesome, however, since digitonin can cause
cytosolic proteins such as myoglobin to leak out of the cell. For this
reason, we based our calculations of
Cai on maximum fluorescence
obtained with an infusion of A-23187. Other techniques such as tetany
of the heart in the presence of a high extracellular calcium
concentration may also useful (19).
Analysis of the calcium fluorescence signal obtained from the perfused
rabbit heart (Fig. 11) indicates a sharp rise in
Cai during early systole, which
occurs 40 ms before the pressure rise. The subsequent fall in calcium
appears to have two phases, an early rapid phase followed by a more
gradual decline to presystolic levels. This second phase or shoulder in
the calcium peak is probably significant and has been observed in
calcium transients from single myocytes using other calcium indicators
(7, 19). Furthermore, response of the heart to a calcium bolus (Fig.
10B) demonstrates a slower rate of
rise in peak calcium fluorescence than the rate of rise in peak
pressure. This comparison may be useful for defining calcium
sensitivity of myofibrils.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
Thanks are due to William Hughes for machining the heart chamber
and to Dr. Simon Watkins, Director of the Imaging Center of the
Department of Cell Biology and Physiology at the University of
Pittsburgh, for critical help in obtaining the confocal images.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
This work was supported in part by National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute Grants HL-46207, HL-40354, and HL-02847; by PPG-HL18708; by
National Institutes of Health Center Grant 1P41-RR-03631; by a
grant-in-aid from the American Heart Association, Western Pennsylvania Affiliate; and by the Whitaker Foundation.
Address for reprint requests: P. J. del Nido, Dept. of Cardiac
Surgery, The Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA
02115.
Received 13 January 1997; accepted in final form 15 October 1997.
 |
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