INVESTIGADORES
MUNDIÑA Cecilia Beatriz
artículos
Título:
Prolonged Ca2+ release refractoriness and T-tubule disruption as determinants of increased propensity to cardiac alternans in the hypertensive heart disease
Autor/es:
MARIÁNGELO, JUAN IGNACIO ELIO; DI MARZIO, GABRIEL DARÍO; GONANO, LUIS ALBERTO; SAID, MATILDE; MUNDIÑA - WEILENMANN, CECILIA
Revista:
ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2023
ISSN:
1748-1708
Resumen:
Aim: Cardiac alternans is a dynamical phenomenon linked to the genesis of severe arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. It has been proposed that alternans is caused by alterations in Ca2+ handling by the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), in both the SR Ca2+ uptake and release processes. The hypertrophic myocardium is particularly prone to alternans, but the precise mechanisms underlying its increased vulnerability are not known. Methods: Mechanical alternans (intact hearts) and Ca2+ alternans (cardiac myocytes) were studied in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) during the first year of age after the onset of hypertension and compared with age-matched normotensive rats. Subcellular Ca2+ alternans, T-tubule organization, SR Ca2+ uptake, and Ca2+ release refractoriness were measured. Results: The increased susceptibility of SHR to high-frequency-induced mechanical and Ca2+ alternans appeared when the hypertrophy developed, associated with an adverse remodeling of the T-tubule network (6 mo). At the subcellular level, Ca2+ discordant alternans was also observed. From 6 mo of age, SHR myocytes showed a prolongation of Ca2+ release refractoriness without alterations in the capacity of SR Ca2+ removal, measured by the frequency-dependent acceleration of relaxation. Sensitizing SR Ca2+ release channels (RyR2) by a low dose of caffeine or by an increase in extracellular Ca2+ concentration, shortened refractoriness of SR Ca2+ release, and reduced alternans in SHR hearts. Conclusions: The tuning of SR Ca2+ release refractoriness is a crucial target to prevent cardiac alternans in a hypertrophic myocardium with an adverse T-tubule remodeling.