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1 Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, St. Boniface General Hospital Research Center, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R2H 2A6; and 2 Cardiovascular Research Laboratory and Departments of Physiology and Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095
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ABSTRACT |
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Na+/Ca2+
exchange is the primary mechanism mediating
Ca2+ efflux from cardiac myocytes
during diastole and, thus, can prominently influence contractile force.
In addition to transporting Na+
and Ca2+, the exchanger is also
regulated by these ions. Although structure-function studies have
identified protein regions of the exchanger subserving these regulatory
processes, their physiological importance is unknown. In this study, we
examined the electrophysiological and mechanical consequences of
cardiospecific overexpression of the canine cardiac exchanger NCX1.1
and a deletion mutant of NCX1.1 (
680-685), devoid of
intracellular Na+
(Na+i)- and
Ca2+
(Ca2+i)- dependent regulatory
properties, in transgenic mice. Using the giant excised
patch-clamp technique, normal ionic regulation was observed in membrane
patches from cardiomyocytes isolated from control and transgenic mice
overexpressing NCX1.1. In contrast, ionic regulation was nearly
abolished in mice overexpressing
680-685, indicating that the
native regulatory processes could be overwhelmed by expression of the
transgene. To address the physiological consequences of ionic
regulation of the
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger, we examined postrest force development in papillary muscles
from NCX1.1 and
680-685 transgenic mice. Postrest potentiation was found to be substantially greater in
680-685 than in NCX1.1 transgenic mice, supporting the notion that ionic regulation of Na+/Ca2+
exchange plays a significant functional role in cardiac contractile properties.
giant excised patch; sodium-calcium exchange; ionic regulation; postrest potentiation
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INTRODUCTION |
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SODIUM-CALCIUM (Na+/Ca2+) exchange is the principal means by which intracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+i) is removed from cardiac myocytes during diastole (9, 22, 31). Consequently, the activity of this transporter can affect cardiac contractile force by influencing both diastolic Ca2+i levels and the overall cellular Ca2+ load. Moreover, alterations in the rate of Ca2+i removal should strongly influence the characteristics of individual contractions by altering the nature of the Ca2+ transient. Depending on the existing electrochemical gradients, Na+/Ca2+ exchange may also contribute to the elevation of Ca2+i (12, 33) and may be involved in Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) (24, 25). However, our understanding of the regulation of Na+/Ca2+ exchange activity to accomplish this range of tasks is incomplete.
Perhaps the best illustration of the role of Na+/Ca2+ exchange in influencing cardiac contractile force is provided by cardiac glycosides (e.g., digoxin). These agents, through inhibition of the Na+-K+-ATPase, lead to elevations in intracellular Na+ (Na+i) levels. This effect mediates inhibition of net Ca2+ efflux by Na+/Ca2+ exchange with a resultant positive inotropic effect (17, 31). Furthermore, elevation of Na+i enhances the ability of reverse Na+/Ca2+ exchange to operate as a Ca2+ entry mechanism, which would also result in positive inotropy (12, 33).
During steady-state stimulation, Na+/Ca2+ exchange must remove the same amount of Ca2+ that enters the myocyte to avoid Ca2+i overload or depletion (14, 30). Because the amount of Ca2+ entering the cell via L-type Ca2+ channels can vary widely in response to physiological and pharmacological manipulation, it appears that Na+/Ca2+ exchange is capable of matching these fluctuations. This could be accomplished by a reserve of exchangers and/or by regulating their activity. Existing data suggest that exchanger capacity may be larger than ordinarily required because both the SR and Na+/Ca2+ exchange can independently mediate rapid relaxation (10). This ability may result from an excess of tonically active exchangers or via recruitment from a pool of regulated exchangers.
Giant patch-clamp studies have established that in addition to
transporting Na+ and
Ca2+, the exchanger is also
regulated by these ions (19). Under conditions of outward current
generation (i.e., reverse
Na+/Ca2+
exchange), application of Na+i not only
triggers exchange activity but also induces an inactive state of the
transporter (21). This process, termed
Na+i-dependent regulation, manifests as a
rapid (i.e., ~100 ms) rise of exchange current to a peak, followed by
a relatively slow decay (i.e., seconds) to a steady-state level of
activity. Ca2+i-dependent regulation, on
the other hand, refers to the stimulation of outward exchange current
by Ca2+i acting at a site distinct from
the transport site (20). Although giant patch-clamp studies have
demonstrated this regulatory process to be most responsive within the
diastolic/systolic range of Ca2+i
concentration ([Ca2+]i)
(i.e., EC50
0.3 µM) (19, 20,
27), studies in intact cells point to a much higher potency of
Ca2+i to regulate exchange activity (23,
29). The basis(es) for this discrepancy is currently unknown.
Ionic regulation of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange activity has been characterized extensively in giant excised
membrane patches from isolated ventricular myocytes and
Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing the canine cardiac exchanger NCX1.1 (19-21, 27, 35). Although
structure-function studies have identified several regions of the
exchanger molecule that play important roles in these regulatory
processes (16, 26-28), there is presently little information
available concerning the physiological significance of exchanger
regulation. To address this issue, we determined the dependence of
contractile force on rest interval and stimulation frequency in
papillary muscles from two transgenic mouse lines, one of which
cardiospecifically overexpressed canine NCX1.1 and the other a deletion
mutant of NCX1.1,
680-685, in which both
Na+- and
Ca2+-dependent regulatory
mechanisms were essentially eliminated.
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METHODS |
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Production of transgenic mice.
The production of mice overexpressing NCX1.1 has been described
previously (1, 6, 15, 34, 38). The same transgene construct using the
-myosin heavy chain promoter was utilized to produce mice
overexpressing
680-685 in cardiac muscle. A DNA cassette
encoding for NCX1.1 with amino acids 680-685 deleted was subcloned
into the construct used previously. The transgene was then used by the
University of California, Los Angeles, Transgenic Core Facility for
transgenic mouse production.
Isolation of murine cardiac myocytes. Ventricular myocytes were isolated from adult mouse hearts as described (36), with minor modifications. Briefly, mice were heparinized (10 IU ip) for 10 min, generally anesthetized (5% isoflurane-95% O2), and euthanized by cervical dislocation. The hearts were rapidly excised and placed in oxygenated Ca2+-free Tyrode solution consisting of (in mM) 137 NaCl, 10 D-glucose, 5.4 KCl, 5 HEPES, 0.5 MgCl2, and 0.3 NaH2PO4, pH 7.4 (37°C) with NaOH, at 22°C, and the aortas were cannulated and connected to a perfusion apparatus. Perfusion solutions were equilibrated with 100% O2 at 37°C and administered at ~2 ml/min as follows: 5 min with Ca2+-free Tyrode solution; ~10 min with Ca2+-free Tyrode solution containing 1.25 mg/ml collagenase (type 2; Worthington), 0.063 mg/ml protease (type XIV; Sigma), and 0.94 mg/ml fatty acid-free BSA (Sigma); and 10 min with Kraftbrühe solution (KB) consisting of (in mM) 70 L-glutamic acid, 25 KCl, 20 taurine, 10 KH2PO4, 10 HEPES, 10 D-glucose, 3 MgCl2, and 0.5 EGTA, pH 7.4 (37°C) with KOH. After they were removed from the perfusion apparatus, ventricles were teased apart and cells dispersed by trituration. Cells were washed several times in KB and stored at 4°C until use.
Isolation of canine cardiac myocytes. Ventricular myocytes were isolated from adult male mongrel dog hearts as follows. All procedures were conducted at 37°C, and all solutions were equilibrated with 95% O2-5% CO2. Dogs were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (30 mg/kg) containing heparin (220 IU/kg), and the hearts were rapidly excised through an intercostal incision, fibrillated, and submerged in Tyrode solution consisting of (in mM) 129 NaCl, 20 NaHCO3, 5.5 D-glucose, 4.0 KCl, 1.8 CaCl2, 0.9 NaH2PO4, and 0.5 MgSO4, pH 7.4 at 37°C with NaOH. A large wedge of left ventricle was excised around the left anterior descending coronary artery, and the artery was cannulated and flushed with ~50 ml of Ca2+-free Krebs solution consisting of (in mM) 118.5 NaCl, 14.5 NaHCO3, 11.1 D-glucose, 4.8 KCl, 2.7 MgSO4, and 1.2 KH2PO4 containing 0.1% BSA (Sigma), pH 7.4 (37°C) with NaOH. The wedge was mounted on a recirculating pump and perfused at 12 ml/min for ~10-15 min with Ca2+-free Krebs solution containing 0.05% collagenase (type 2; Worthington). Epicardial layers were removed, and midmyocardial layers were harvested with a dermatome, minced, and placed in Krebs solution supplemented with 0.5 mM MgSO4, 0.3 mM CaCl2, 1.5% BSA, and 0.04% collagenase before they were incubated (with shaking) for 10 min and passed through a nylon mesh (220 µm) for collection of dispersed cells. Tissue fragments were returned to fresh collagenase-containing Krebs solution, and the procedure was repeated four times. Myocytes were centrifuged at 40 g for 2 min, supernatants were discarded, and pellets were resuspended in HEPES-Tyrode solution consisting of (in mM) 132 NaCl, 20 HEPES, 11.1 D-glucose, 5 KCl, 3.2 MgSO4, and 0.5 CaCl2 containing 1.5% BSA and 50 mg/ml gentamicin. The myocyte fraction exhibiting the highest ratio of viable to nonviable cells was stored at 4°C until use.
Miscellaneous.
Oocytes were prepared from Xenopus
laevis. cRNA encoding NCX1.1 and
680-685 were
prepared, and ~5 ng cDNA were injected per oocyte exactly as
previously described (16). Myocyte membrane "blebbing" was
induced by placing cells in a hypotonic solution consisting of (in mM)
67.5 KCl, 9.0 D-glucose, 6.75 HEPES, 4.5 EGTA, and 0.9 MgCl2, pH
7.2 (22°C) with KOH, at 4°C for several hours before the
experiment (21).
Electrophysiological analyses. Outward Na+/Ca2+ exchange currents were characterized in ~25-µm-diameter membrane patches from oocytes and myocyte "blebs" using the giant excised patch-clamp technique. Outward currents were elicited by rapid (i.e., ~200 ms) application of 100 mM Na+i plus 0-10 µM Ca2+i to the intracellular surface of the patches. Pipette (i.e., extracellular) Ca2+ (Ca2+o) to be transported was constant at 8 mM. Cytoplasmic solutions contained (in mM) 100 Li/Na-aspartate, 20 TEA-OH, 20 MOPS, 20 CsOH, 10 EGTA, 1.02-1.5 Mg(OH)2:2.04-3.0 NH3SO3, and 0-9.96 Ca(OH)2:0-19.92 NH3SO3, pH 7.0 (37°C) with MES or LiOH. Extracellular (i.e., pipette) solution contained (in mM) 100 N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMG):MES, 30 HEPES, 30 TEA-OH, 16 NH3SO3, 8 CaCO3, 6 KOH, 0.25 ouabain, 0.1 flufenamic acid, and 0.1 niflumic acid, pH 7.0 (37°C) with MES. All experiments were conducted at 37 ± 1°C.
Contractility measurements. Strain control or transgenic mice were euthanized, and their hearts were rapidly excised and placed in oxygenated Tyrode solution at 22°C containing 30 mM 2,3-butanedione monoxime plus 0.5 mM Ca2+. Left ventricular papillary muscles were accessed and tied at both ends using 9.0 nylon suture. Muscles were then placed between a permanently mounted glass hook located on an ~0.25-ml bath and a second hook attached to a capacitive force transducer mounted to a micromanipulator. Muscles were exposed to a constant temperature (37 ± 1°C), regulated flow (~6-7 ml/min) of oxygenated Tyrode solution containing 2 mM Ca2+. The muscles were allowed to equilibrate at 3-Hz stimulation with a small preload applied [e.g., ~0.5 maximum length (Lmax)]. After ~60 min, the muscles were gradually stretched to Lmax, and experiments commenced once steady-state levels of force were attained. For force-rest interval studies, electrical stimulation was interrupted for 1-60 s and then resumed until steady state was reestablished. Statistical analyses were conducted using Student's t-test, and the Bonferroni correction factor was applied to reduce the risk of a type 1 error.
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RESULTS |
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Figure 1 illustrates the salient features
of Ca2+i-dependent regulation for cloned
canine NCX1.1 and
680-685 expressed in Xenopus
laevis oocytes. Outward
Na+/Ca2+
exchange currents are shown where cytoplasmic
Na+ exchanges for extracellular
(i.e., pipette) Ca2+. This outward
(or reverse) mode of transport is typically used to investigate
Ca2+i regulation because the transported (i.e., extracellular) and regulatory (i.e., intracellular) pools of
Ca2+ are on opposite membrane
surfaces. The ability to distinguish between the effects of regulatory
and transport Ca2+ is obscured for
inward (i.e., forward mode) current measurements because both processes
occur on the same membrane surface (i.e., intracellular). In the
representative records shown, currents were activated by applying 100 mM Na+ to the cytoplasmic surface
of the patch, which exchanges for 8 mM
Ca2+ in the pipette. The single
variable in these experiments was the concentration of regulatory
Ca2+i (0-10 µM) applied to the
cytoplasmic surface. Note the progressive stimulation of exchange
current for NCX1.1 in response to increasing levels of
Ca2+i (Fig. 1). Regulatory
Ca2+ stimulates peak current and
progressively increases steady-state currents by alleviating current
inactivation. At higher regulatory Ca2+ concentrations (e.g.,
10
µM), peak current declines (see below). These properties are largely
eliminated for
680-685; that is, exchange current records
appear maximally stimulated, similar to those observed for NCX1.1 in
the presence of 10 µM regulatory Ca2+ or for NCX1.1 that has
undergone deregulation after exposure to
-chymotrypsin (19).
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The pooled data shown in Fig. 2 illustrate
the effects of different concentrations of regulatory
Ca2+i on peak and steady-state outward
exchange currents. Data were obtained as described for Fig. 1, and
currents were normalized to the respective values obtained at 3 µM
Ca2+i for either NCX1.1 or
680-685. For NCX1.1, peak current was markedly stimulated by 1 µM Ca2+i but was reduced at the highest
Ca2+i concentration examined (i.e., 10 µM), an effect attributable to competition between
Na+i and
Ca2+i at the intracellular transport site
(20, 35). Steady-state currents mediated by NCX1.1 were progressively
increased by regulatory Ca2+i. This
stimulatory effect occurs because of the progressive saturation of the
regulatory Ca2+ binding site and
the alleviation of Na+i-dependent inactivation, balanced by the inhibition of current caused by the
competition between Na+i and
Ca2+i at the intracellular transport site
(21). In contrast,
680-685 was mainly insensitive to the
presence or absence of regulatory Ca2+i
except at 10 µM, where, as with NCX1.1, competition between
Na+i and
Ca2+i led to a reduction in current
levels. Because both Na+i- and
Ca2+i-dependent regulatory properties are effectively eliminated for
680-685, as shown by near-maximal peak and steady-state currents at 0-10 µM
Ca2+i, we believe that the activity of
this exchanger would be unaltered by the ionic fluxes it could likely
encounter in an intact mammalian cardiomyocyte.
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Because the transgenic mice employed in this study overexpressed canine
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers, we needed to determine whether or not species differences in exchanger regulatory and/or transport properties could potentially confound the interpretation of results from subsequent experiments. Thus we examined the electrophysiological properties of the native transporters in isolated ventricular myocytes from mice and dogs. For
these studies, outward
Na+/Ca2+
exchange currents were elicited in giant patches excised from sarcolemmal membrane blebs that were induced by incubating the myocytes
in hypotonic buffer for several hours before experimentation (see
METHODS). Figure
3 illustrates the ionic regulatory profiles of exchange currents from these two preparations in representative patches, with the use of the same protocol described for Fig. 1. Note
that the response to regulatory Ca2+i is
qualitatively similar between these two species as well as to that
observed for NCX1.1 expressed in
Xenopus oocytes (Fig. 1). This
suggests that the regulatory properties of canine NCX1.1 expressed in
transgenic mice will behave similarly to those of the native murine
exchangers, varying primarily in the level of exchanger expression.
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This notion is borne out by examination of the pooled data shown in
Fig. 4, which illustrate the effects of
regulatory Ca2+i on peak and steady-state
outward currents mediated by the native dog and mouse
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers. As for oocyte membrane patches (Fig. 2), currents were
normalized to the respective values obtained at 3 µM regulatory Ca2+i for either canine or murine
myocytes. With respect to the Ca2+i
dependence of steady-state currents, native dog and mouse exchangers
behaved identically. Similarly, the relationship between peak current
and regulatory [Ca2+]i
was superimposable for dogs and mice up to 3 µM, although a deviation
at the highest
[Ca2+]i
of 10 µM was observed. We have no explanation for this deviation. Overall, however, it appears reasonable that expression of the canine
NCX1.1 transgene in mice will not impart a novel ionic regulatory
phenotype to the
Na+/Ca2+
exchange process.
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The transgenic mice overexpressing NCX1.1 have been described in detail
elsewhere (1, 6, 15, 34, 38), and a mouse line overexpressing the
680-685 exchanger in cardiac tissue was developed using an
identical approach. The level of exchanger overexpression in transgenic
680-685 mice was assessed using membrane vesicles isolated from
cardiac tissue, as described previously (1).
Na+ gradient-dependent
45Ca2+
uptake was 0.17 ± 0.02 and 0.38 ± 0.04 nmol
Ca2+ · mg
protein
1 · 3 s
1 in vesicles from strain
control and
680-685 transgenic mouse hearts, respectively. This
124% increase is comparable to the level of overexpression seen
previously in the NCX1.1 transgenic mice (148% increase), as assessed
by the same technique (1).
Figure 5 illustrates the effects of
regulatory Ca2+i on outward
Na+/Ca2+
exchange currents in giant patches from sarcolemmal membrane blebs
derived from transgenic mouse myocytes under conditions identical to
those described for Fig. 3. From transgenic NCX1.1 myocyte patches, we
observed the typical stimulation of peak and steady-state exchange
currents as regulatory Ca2+i was
elevated. In contrast, the response to regulatory
Ca2+i was largely eliminated in myocyte
patches from transgenic mice overexpressing
680-685. Thus
overexpression of
680-685 appears to overwhelm the native ionic
regulatory phenotype of the mouse and leads to a regulatory profile
dominated by Ca2+i insensitivity. The
residual Na+i- and
Ca2+i-dependent regulation can be
attributed to the background profile of native mouse exchangers.
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This is further substantiated by examination of the pooled data shown
in Fig. 6, which illustrate the
Ca2+i dependence of peak and steady-state
exchange currents in myocyte patches derived from transgenic NCX1.1 and
680-685 mice. Ca2+i regulation
for transgenic NCX1.1 myocytes was similar to that observed in native
dog and mouse myocytes (Fig. 3) as well as that in
Xenopus oocytes expressing NCX1.1
(Fig. 1); that is, both peak and steady-state currents are augmented by
regulatory Ca2+i to a maximum at ~3
µM. In contrast, outward currents generated in myocyte patches
derived from transgenic
680-685 mice were mainly insensitive to
the presence or absence of regulatory
Ca2+i, a pattern similar to that observed
in Xenopus oocytes expressing
680-685 (Fig. 1). These results indicate that ionic regulation has been essentially eliminated in the transgenic
680-685 line, whereas overexpression of NCX1.1 is associated with ionic regulatory properties indistinguishable from those of the native dog and mouse
exchangers.
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This point is further illustrated by the representative outward current
data shown in Fig. 7, in which the effects
of application, removal, and reapplication of regulatory
Ca2+i on steady-state
Na+/Ca2+
exchange currents are shown in giant patches derived from control, transgenic NCX1.1, and transgenic
680-685 myocytes. The
protocol employed was the same as that used to generate the data shown in Figs. 1 and 3, with the exception that once steady-state current levels had been attained in the presence of 1 µM
Ca2+i, regulatory
Ca2+i was removed for ~32 s and then reapplied until steady-state levels of current were reacquired. Both
the control and transgenic NCX1.1 lines exhibited a similar, and
substantial, current decrease on removal of regulatory
Ca2+i. Note that under these conditions,
exchange current is almost completely suppressed despite the huge
gradient favoring
Na+/Ca2+
exchange (i.e., 100 mM Na+i vs. 0 mM
Na+o; 8 mM
Ca2+o vs. 0 µM
Ca2+i). This illustrates that
Na+/Ca2+
exchange activity can be tightly regulated by this mechanism. In
contrast, transgenic
680-685 exchangers were essentially
unresponsive to this maneuver; that is, steady-state current levels
were largely insensitive to the presence or absence of regulatory
Ca2+i. The slight reduction in
steady-state current levels is most likely attributable to the native,
regulated exchangers present in the myocyte membrane. Thus, if
Ca2+i-dependent regulation plays an
important role in activating wild-type
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers under physiological conditions, it is reasonable to expect
that transgenic
680-685 exchangers should be constitutively active and their activity virtually independent of these regulatory mechanisms. On the other hand,
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in control and transgenic NCX1.1 mouse lines should be
normally regulated according to the cytoplasmic
Ca2+ fluxes of a myocyte under
steady-state stimulation.
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Having established that myocytes from the two transgenic mouse lines
show the anticipated electrophysiological characteristics, we
investigated cardiac contractile properties in electrically stimulated,
isolated papillary muscles. Figure 8
illustrates representative force tracings from papillary muscles
derived from the two transgenic mouse lines. Muscles were electrically
stimulated at 3 Hz, and a rest interval of 5 s was imposed near the
middle of the traces. Postrest potentiation was observed in both
preparations, followed by a gradual recovery to steady-state force
levels. This relationship was characterized over a range of frequencies
(2-6 Hz) and rest intervals (1-60 s) to gain insight into the
Ca2+-handling behavior of the
myocytes.
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Figure 9 illustrates postrest force
development in papillary muscles derived from transgenic NCX1.1 and
680-685 mice over a range of stimulation frequencies (3-6
Hz) after rest intervals of 3, 5, and 30 s. Data are expressed in terms
of the potentiation fraction, defined as the ratio of force developed
by the first postrest beat to that of steady-state beats preceding the
rest interval. The duration of rest intervals imposed was randomly applied, and muscles were allowed to return to steady-state force levels between each rest period. At each rest interval and at all
frequencies examined, postrest potentiation was greater for muscles
obtained from transgenic
680-685 mice than for those obtained
from NCX1.1 mice.
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Figure 10 illustrates postrest
potentiation over a wider range of rest intervals (1-60 s) imposed
on a steady-state train of stimuli at a frequency of 4 Hz. In general,
postrest potentiation increased at shorter intervals (2-10 s) and
then gradually declined for both transgenic mouse lines. Frequently,
spontaneous beating occurred during the longer rest intervals (e.g.,
15-60 s). Consequently, these data were not included in the data
shown in Fig. 10, but they raise the possibility that the decline in
postrest potentiation at lengthy rest intervals may be the result of
asynchronous Ca2+ release events
below our detection threshold. Nevertheless, postrest potentiation was
greater at all rest intervals in muscles from the
680-685 mice
than in those from the NCX1.1 transgenic mice.
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DISCUSSION |
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We examined the consequences of overexpressing the canine cardiac
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger NCX1.1 and a deletion mutant of NCX1.1,
680-685,
lacking ionic regulation, in transgenic mouse hearts. The first goal
was to determine whether overexpression of the
680-685 mutant
led to a phenotype in which ionic regulation of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange was reduced or eliminated. Using electrophysiological techniques, we showed that a marked reduction in ionic regulation of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange occurs with expression of
680-685 and that myocytes acquire a regulatory phenotype similar to that observed for the
680-685 mutant expressed in
Xenopus oocytes. Using intact
papillary muscles, we then showed that this alteration of ionic
regulation of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange leads to alterations of cardiac contractile properties. Specifically, we observed differences in postrest potentiation, a
paradigm providing insight into the interplay between
Ca2+ handling by the sarcolemma
and the SR.
Na+/Ca2+ exchange: role and regulation. Na+/Ca2+ exchange is the major pathway for transsarcolemmal Ca2+ removal, a requisite for cardiac muscle relaxation (2, 9). Ca2+ efflux by this mechanism is similar in quantity to that which enters cardiac cells via L-type Ca2+ channels (30). On a beat-to-beat basis, the exact magnitude of Ca2+ fluxes mediated by Na+/Ca2+ exchange is not known because several confounding factors prevent accurate assessment. For example, in several species and/or under certain experimental conditions, Na+/Ca2+ exchange may also serve as a Ca2+ entry mechanism (24, 25, 37). If this occurs, then an even greater amount of Ca2+ efflux would be required of the Na+/Ca2+ exchange process to maintain Ca2+ homeostasis. On the other hand, although the role of sarcolemmal Ca2+-ATPases in diastolic Ca2+ removal is generally thought to be of less importance than Na+/Ca2+ exchange, any contribution by this pathway would reduce the Ca2+ load presented to the exchanger (3-5). The lack of specific inhibitors for either of these Ca2+ efflux mechanisms hampers our ability to determine their exact contributions. Furthermore, the substantial species differences, in terms of the relative importance of these Ca2+ efflux pathways, render the generalization of results from most studies problematic at best. In any event, Ca2+ efflux must equal Ca2+ influx during regular stimulation to avert Ca2+ overload or depletion, and Na+/Ca2+ exchange plays a major role in this process.
Cardiac muscle can operate over a wide range of inotropic levels without evidence of toxicity. Thus, other than a brief tolerance for imbalance between Ca2+ entry and efflux, Na+/Ca2+ exchange must also operate over the same dynamic range as Ca2+ influx to reestablish steady-state Ca2+i transients at different set points. However, little is known about how this is accomplished. In particular, it is unknown whether the availability of individual Na+/Ca2+ exchangers is regulated and/or whether the activity of the entire population is altered to meet the prevailing requirements for Ca2+ homeostasis. Another possibility is that the capacity for Ca2+ efflux by Na+/Ca2+ exchange is sufficiently large that electrochemical gradients solely determine flux and, therefore, active regulation may not be required. In this case, the safety margin allowing for a range of Ca2+ efflux capacities would simply reside in this excess population of tonically active exchangers. Any or all of these possibilities (i.e., recruitment, altered intrinsic activity, tonically active excess population) may provide the Na+/Ca2+ exchange system with the required ability to alter Ca2+ efflux to coincide with the prevailing Ca2+ influx levels. Regulation of Na+/Ca2+ exchange activity by both Na+i and Ca2+i has been well characterized using the giant excised patch-clamp technique (19-21), and discrete protein regions playing prominent roles in ionic regulation have been identified (16, 26, 27). Mutagenesis techniques have allowed for closer inspection of these regulatory mechanisms by providing the ability to alter their behaviors. These capabilities, in conjunction with the use of transgene technology, now provide the ability to study the function and importance of these ionic regulatory mechanisms under more physiologically meaningful conditions. In this study we have investigated the role of ionic regulation in mouse hearts by cardiospecifically overexpressing a mutant Na+/Ca2+ exchanger,
680-685,
that is devoid of these regulatory mechanisms.
When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, the
activity of the cardiac
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger NCX1.1 is positively regulated by
Ca2+i over the same diastolic/systolic
concentration range thought to occur during normal cardiac
excitation-contraction coupling; that is, at diastolic
Ca2+i levels of ~100 nM, the exchanger
is mainly inactivated, whereas the higher concentrations thought to
coincide with the systolic Ca2+i
transient (e.g., 1-10 µM) are associated with a marked
stimulation of exchange current. This
Ca2+i-dependent regulatory mechanism can
respond rapidly (e.g., ~100 ms) or slowly (e.g., seconds), depending
on the protocol being employed for examination (19, 20). In particular,
the onset of Ca2+i-dependent activation
occurs within solution-switching time when applied simultaneously with
Na+i. In contrast, if steady-state current production is perturbed by the removal or reapplication of
regulatory Ca2+i, a time course of
seconds is required to reestablish the steady state.
Deletion of amino acids 680-685 in NCX1.1 (
680-685)
produces an exchanger that is largely insensitive to regulatory
Ca2+i and in which
Na+i-dependent inactivation is nearly absent. Outward currents behave as though a high concentration of
regulatory Ca2+i is always present,
similar to the deregulated profile observed after
-chymotrypsin
treatment of giant patches (19). The mechanism(s) by which both
regulatory processes are eliminated for
680-685 is unknown but
presumably reflects an inability to form or sustain these inactive
states. Therefore, if these regulatory mechanisms are operational
within the heart, the transgenic
680-685 mouse line might
exhibit altered functional behavior.
Consequences of NCX1.1 and
680-685
overexpression in transgenic mice.
Several recent studies have examined the functional consequences of
overexpressing canine NCX1.1 in transgenic mice. Notable differences
between the transgenic line and control mice include 1) enhanced
Na+/Ca2+
exchange currents and relaxation rates of
Ca2+ transients and contractions
(1, 34, 38), 2) an increased inotropic responsiveness to the
Na+-channel agonist BDF-9148 (6),
3) gender-specific increased susceptibility to ischemia-reperfusion injury (15), and
4) the finding that compensatory
alterations do not occur in the
Ca2+-handling proteins of the SR
(34). Overall, cardiac function appears to be relatively normal,
although experimental manipulations can detect alterations associated
with overexpression of NCX1.1.
680-685 in mouse
hearts leads to a phenotype dominated by this exchanger in which both
Na+i- and
Ca2+i-dependent regulatory mechanisms are
markedly attenuated. In the complete absence of regulatory
Ca2+i, substantial
Na+/Ca2+
exchange activity was still observed for
680-685, whereas
currents were barely measurable in patches from NCX1.1 transgenic mice or controls. We hypothesize that Ca2+i
regulation plays a role in the recruitment of
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers to coincide with the time-averaged
Ca2+ levels in the myoplasm.
Although electrochemical gradients would determine the direction of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange transport (i.e., forward or reverse), the availability of
exchangers engaged in transport at any given moment may be controlled
by ionic regulatory mechanisms. For example, if time-averaged Ca2+i rises, then additional exchangers
could be recruited to allow for an augmented
Ca2+ efflux. If so, then
overexpression of NCX1.1 should not profoundly alter physiological
cardiac function because the excess of available exchangers would
simply be inactivated as diastolic Ca2+i levels were attained. This property would be lost, however, in myocytes
from the
680-685 transgenic line, in which all mutant exchangers would be constitutively active, irrespective of cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels. Because the
680-685 mouse line also expresses native NCX1.1 exchangers,
these would be expected to respond normally to fluctuating
Ca2+i levels. However, the net effect is
that Ca2+ efflux mediated by
Na+/Ca2+
exchange might be more prominent in
680-685 myocytes given the impaired ability of the mutant exchanger to switch off. Future studies
examining diastolic Ca2+i levels and the kinetics of the Ca2+ transients
would be especially useful in testing this hypothesis.
We used rest potentiation as a paradigm to assess the competition
between the SR and sarcolemma for Ca2+i sequestration/extrusion. The major limitation of this approach is the
relative paucity and conflicting nature of data available for mouse
cardiac muscle. Recent studies suggest that the contractile behavior of
mouse hearts differs substantially from that in rats, the species
previously thought to bear the most resemblance (18). Rat muscle
exhibits postrest potentiation because of an augmented SR
Ca2+ release following a rest
period. This is thought to reflect the accumulation of
Ca2+i during diastole via reverse Na+/Ca2+
exchange (7, 8, 11); cytoplasmic
Na+ levels are considerably higher
in rats than in most other species (32). The potentiation observed
in mouse muscle may occur because of a similar mechanism
(34), although recent evidence does not support this possibility. Mouse
cardiac muscle is considerably more tolerant of extracellular
Ca2+ elevations than that of rats,
suggesting that Ca2+i does not accumulate
during diastole (18). Thus rest potentiation in mice may occur by means
similar to those proposed for canine and ferret muscle, in which SR
Ca2+ release is augmented without
the necessity of increased SR Ca2+
loading (11).
We observed substantially greater rest potentiation in papillary muscle
from
680-685 mice than in muscle from NCX1.1 mice. Irrespective
of mechanism, these results indicate that ionic regulation of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange alters the Ca2+ handling
properties in cardiac muscle from these animals. Tentatively, we
attribute these results to the specific consequence of impairing Ca2+i-dependent regulation. One
explanation is that nonregulated
Na+/Ca2+
exchange is more effective at competing with the SR for cytoplasmic Ca2+ removal. The net effect is
equivalent to lowering extracellular Ca2+ or reducing
Ca2+ influx, both of which lead to
an apparent increase in rest potentiation by reducing steady-state
force development (13). Another possibility is that deregulated,
reverse
Na+/Ca2+
exchange increases intracellular
Ca2+ during rest, similar to
actions in rat cardiac muscle. However, this is uncertain in light of
recent evidence suggesting that mice and rats differ substantially in
terms of their Ca2+ handling
properties (18). Lastly, although the salient features of wild-type
canine and murine NCX1.1 exchangers appear similar, it is not possible
to state with certainty that their respective functions are equivalent
(or predictable) in the context of transgenic mouse cardiac muscle. The
possibility exists that alterations in the number and/or activity of
the native murine exchangers, occurring in response to overexpression
of the transgenes, could render our data interpretations tenuous.
Nevertheless, our demonstration of functional alterations of cardiac
performance in transgenic mice overexpressing a deregulated
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger lends support to the notion that ionic regulation of Na+/Ca2+
exchange is a physiologically relevant phenomenon.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
|---|
We thank Drs. Peter Backx (University of Toronto) and Henry Duff (University of Calgary) for helpful discussions concerning the preparation of murine myocytes.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
This work was supported by Heart and Stroke Foundation of Manitoba and Medical Research Council of Canada operating grants (to L. V. Hryshko) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant HL-48509 (to K. D. Philipson). K. Maxwell is supported by a studentship from the St. Boniface General Hospital Research Foundation.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. V. Hryshko, Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, St. Boniface General Hospital Research Center, 351 Tache Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R2H 2A6.
Received 26 February 1999; accepted in final form 14 July 1999.
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