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Effects of endothelin-1 on calcium and potassium currents in undiseased human ventricular myocytes

Effects of endothelin-1 on calcium and potassium currents in undiseased human ventricular myocytes Endothelins have been reported to exert a wide range of electrophysiological effects in mammalian cardiac cells. These results are controversial and human data are not available. Our aim was to study the effects of endothelin-1 (ET-1, 8 nmol/l) on the L-type calcium current (I Ca-L) and various potassium currents (rapid component of the delayed rectifier, I Kr; transient outward current, I to; and the inward rectifier K current, I K1) in isolated human ventricular cardiomyocytes. Cells were obtained from undiseased donor hearts using collagenase digestion via the segment perfusion technique. The whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique was applied to measure ionic currents at 37°C. ET-1 significantly decreased peak I Ca-L from 10.2±0.6 to 6.8±0.8 pA/pF at +5 mV (66.7% of control, P<0.05, n=5). This reduction of peak current was accompanied by a lengthening of inactivation. The voltage dependence of steady-state activation and inactivation was not altered by ET-1. I Kr, measured as tail current amplitudes at –40 mV, decreased from 0.31±0.02 to 0.06±0.02 pA/pF (20.3% of control, P<0.05, n=4) after exposure to ET-1. ET-1 failed to change the peak amplitude of I to, measured at +50 mV (9.3±4.6 and 9.0±4.4 pA/pF before and after ET-1, respectively), or steady-state I K1 amplitude, measured at the end of a 400-ms hyperpolarization to –100 mV (3.6±1.4 and 3.7±1.4 pA/pF, n=4). The present results indicate that in undiseased human ventricular myocytes ET-1 inhibits both I Ca-L and I Kr; however, the degree of suppression of the two currents is different. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Pflügers Archiv European Journal of Physiologyl of Physiology Springer Journals

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References (38)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 by Springer-Verlag
Subject
Biomedicine; Human Physiology
ISSN
0031-6768
eISSN
1432-2013
DOI
10.1007/s004240000400
pmid
11205054
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Endothelins have been reported to exert a wide range of electrophysiological effects in mammalian cardiac cells. These results are controversial and human data are not available. Our aim was to study the effects of endothelin-1 (ET-1, 8 nmol/l) on the L-type calcium current (I Ca-L) and various potassium currents (rapid component of the delayed rectifier, I Kr; transient outward current, I to; and the inward rectifier K current, I K1) in isolated human ventricular cardiomyocytes. Cells were obtained from undiseased donor hearts using collagenase digestion via the segment perfusion technique. The whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique was applied to measure ionic currents at 37°C. ET-1 significantly decreased peak I Ca-L from 10.2±0.6 to 6.8±0.8 pA/pF at +5 mV (66.7% of control, P<0.05, n=5). This reduction of peak current was accompanied by a lengthening of inactivation. The voltage dependence of steady-state activation and inactivation was not altered by ET-1. I Kr, measured as tail current amplitudes at –40 mV, decreased from 0.31±0.02 to 0.06±0.02 pA/pF (20.3% of control, P<0.05, n=4) after exposure to ET-1. ET-1 failed to change the peak amplitude of I to, measured at +50 mV (9.3±4.6 and 9.0±4.4 pA/pF before and after ET-1, respectively), or steady-state I K1 amplitude, measured at the end of a 400-ms hyperpolarization to –100 mV (3.6±1.4 and 3.7±1.4 pA/pF, n=4). The present results indicate that in undiseased human ventricular myocytes ET-1 inhibits both I Ca-L and I Kr; however, the degree of suppression of the two currents is different.

Journal

Pflügers Archiv European Journal of Physiologyl of PhysiologySpringer Journals

Published: Sep 7, 2000

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