[PDF][PDF] Nitric oxide regulates the calcium current in isolated human atrial myocytes.

M Kirstein, M Rivet-Bastide, S Hatem… - The Journal of …, 1995 - Am Soc Clin Investig
M Kirstein, M Rivet-Bastide, S Hatem, A Benardeau, JJ Mercadier, R Fischmeister
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1995Am Soc Clin Investig
Cardiac Ca2+ current (ICa) was shown to be regulated by cGMP in a number of different
species. Recently, we found that the NO-donor SIN-1 (3-morpholino-sydnonimine) exerts a
dual regulation of ICa in frog ventricular myocytes via an accumulation of cGMP. To examine
whether NO also regulates Ca2+ channels in human heart, we investigated the effects of
SIN-1 on ICa in isolated human atrial myocytes. An extracellular application of SIN-1
produced a profound stimulatory effect on basal ICa at concentrations> 1 pM. Indeed, 10 pM …
Cardiac Ca2+ current (ICa) was shown to be regulated by cGMP in a number of different species. Recently, we found that the NO-donor SIN-1 (3-morpholino-sydnonimine) exerts a dual regulation of ICa in frog ventricular myocytes via an accumulation of cGMP. To examine whether NO also regulates Ca2+ channels in human heart, we investigated the effects of SIN-1 on ICa in isolated human atrial myocytes. An extracellular application of SIN-1 produced a profound stimulatory effect on basal ICa at concentrations > 1 pM. Indeed, 10 pM SIN-1 induced a approximately 35% increase in ICa. The stimulatory effect of SIN-1 was maximal at 1 nM (approximately 2-fold increase in ICa) and was comparable with the effect of a saturating concentration (1 microM) of isoprenaline, a beta-adrenergic agonist. Increasing the concentration of SIN-1 to 1-100 microM reduced the stimulatory effect in two thirds of the cells. The stimulatory effect of SIN-1 was not mimicked by SIN-1C, the cleavage product of SIN-1 produced after liberation of NO. This suggests that NO mediates the effects of SIN-1 on ICa. Because, in frog heart, the stimulatory effect of SIN-1 on ICa was found to be due to cGMP-induced inhibition of cGMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase (cGI-PDE), we compared the effects of SIN-1 and milrinone, a cGI-PDE selective inhibitor, on ICa in human. Milrinone (10 microM) induced a strong stimulation of ICa (approximately 150%), demonstrating that cGI-PDE controls the amplitude of basal ICa in this tissue. In the presence of milrinone, SIN-1 (0.1-1 nM) had no stimulatory effect on ICa, suggesting that the effects of SIN-1 and MIL were not additive. We conclude that NO may stimulate ICa in human atrial myocytes via inhibition of the cGI-PDE.
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