Ventricular but not atrial electro-mechanical delay of the embryonic heart is altered by anoxia-reoxygenation and improved by nitric oxide

被引:0
作者
Philippe Maury
Alexandre Sarre
Jérôme Terrand
Antonio Rosa
Pavel Kucera
Lukas Kappenberger
Eric Raddatz
机构
[1] University Hospital,Division of Cardiology
[2] Lausanne,Faculty of Medicine
[3] Switzerland; Institute of Physiology,undefined
[4] Faculty of Medicine,undefined
[5] Institute of Physiology,undefined
来源
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2004年 / 265卷
关键词
hypoxia; reoxygenation; excitation–contraction coupling; atrium; ventricle; nitric oxide donor; chick embryo; NOS inhibitor;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background/Aim. Excitation–contraction coupling is modulated by nitric oxide (NO) which otherwise has either beneficial or detrimental effects on myocardial function during hypoxia-reoxygenation. This work aimed at characterizing the variations of electromechanical delay (EMD) induced by anoxia-reoxygenation within the developing heart and determining whether atrial and ventricular EMD are modulated by NO to the same extent. Methods. Hearts of 4 or 4.5-day-old chick embryos were excised and submitted in vitro to normoxia (45 min), anoxia (30 min) and reoxygenation (60 min). Electrocardiogram and atrial and ventricular contractions were simultaneously recorded throughout experiment. Anoxia-reoxygenation-induced chrono-, dromo- and inotropic disturbances and changes in EMD in atrium (EMDa) and ventricle (EMDv) were investigated in control hearts and in hearts exposed to 0.1, 1, 10, 50 and 100 μM of DETA-NONOate (a NO donating agent) or to 50 μM of L-NAME (a NOS inhibitor). Results. Under normoxia, heart rate, PR interval, ventricular shortening velocity, EMDa and EMDv were similar in control, L-NAME-treated and DETA-NONOate-treated hearts. Under anoxia, cardiac activity became markedly erratic within less than 10 min in all groups. At the onset of reoxygenation, EMDv was increased by about 300% with respect to the preanoxic value while EMDa did not vary significatively. Compared to control conditions, L-NAME or DETA-NONOate had no influence on the negative chrono-, dromo- and inotropic effects induced by anoxia-reoxygenation. However, L-NAME prolonged EMDv during anoxia and delayed EMDv recovery during reoxygenation while 100 μM DETA-NONOate had the opposite effects. EMDa was neither affected by NOS inhibitor nor NO donor. At the end of reoxygenation, all the investigated parameters returned to their basal values. Conclusion. This work provides evidence that a NO-dependent pathway is involved in regulation of the ventricular excitation-contraction coupling in the anoxic-reoxygenated developing heart. (Mol Cell Biochem 265: 141–149, 2004)
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 149
页数:8
相关论文
共 243 条
[41]  
Minhas KM(1992)Comparison of the pacemaker properties of chick em-bryonic atrial and ventricular heart cells Trends Cardiovasc Med 2 100-108
[42]  
Kumar A(2001)Adenosine receptors and cardiovascular function Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 281 R401-R407
[43]  
Fradley M(2003)Ontogeny of humoral heart rate regulation in the embryonic mouse Basic Res Cardiol 98 191-92
[44]  
Shoukas AA(1951)Ventricular but not atrial electro-mechanical delay of the embryonic heart is altered by anoxia-reoxygenation and improved by nitric oxide donor J Morphol 88 49-H1230
[45]  
Berkowitz DE(1992)A series of normal stages in the development of the chick embryo Am J Physiol 262 H1224-H2392
[46]  
Hare JM(2003)Oxygen uptake during early cardiogenesis of the chick Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 284 H2384-793
[47]  
Hare JM(1959)Ectopic pacing at physiological rate improves postanoxic recovery of the developing heart Circ Res VII 787-806
[48]  
Massion PB(2000)Electrical and mechanical properties of chick embryo heart chambers J Physiol 524 795-20479
[49]  
Feron O(2000)Functional coupling between glycolysis and excitation-contraction coupling underlies alternans in cat heart cells J Biol Chem 275 20474-456
[50]  
Dessy C(1998)Concentration-dependent effects of nitric oxide on mitochondrial permeability transition and Free Rad Biol Med 25 434-2604