Beta-adrenergic regulation of contractility and protein phosphorylation in spontaneously beating isolated rat myocardial cells |
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Authors: | G Miyakoda A Yoshida H Takisawa T Nakamura |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Osaka University. |
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Abstract: | Spontaneously beating heart myocytes were prepared from adult rat ventricular tissues to study the correlation between beta-adrenergic receptor-stimulated changes in contractile performance and protein phosphorylation in vitro. The plasma membrane of isolated myocardial cells was permeabilized by saponin in the presence of EGTA and Mg-ATP. The permeabilized myocytes, which formed a homogeneous cell population, retained the rod-cell morphology of heart cells in situ and showed spontaneous cyclic contractions. Their contractile activity in response to extracellularly added cAMP mimicked the effects caused by beta-adrenergic stimulation of the whole heart: both the frequency and longitudinal velocity of free contraction and relaxation of the cells increased. Similar increases were observed when beta-agonist, isoproterenol, and GTP were added to suspending medium. In addition, isoproterenol maximally enhanced the adenylate cyclase activity of the cells in the presence of GTP. Both of these effects of isoproterenol were completely blocked by the beta-antagonist propranolol. cAMP-mediated phosphorylation of proteins in the permeabilized myocytes was investigated under conditions in which the beating frequency increased. cAMP elevated the phosphorylation level of five proteins; three of them with apparent molecular masses of 24, 15, and 12 kDa were membrane proteins and the other two with apparent molecular masses of 150 and 28 kDa were myofibrillar proteins. The 24-kDa phosphoprotein dissociated into 12-kDa molecules when boiled in sodium dodecyl sulfate, suggesting that these proteins are oligomeric and monomeric forms of phospholamban. The phosphorylation of these five proteins was stimulated by isoproterenol. The effect of isoproterenol was enhanced by GTP but completely blocked by propranolol. The time course of their phosphorylation correlated well with that of the increase in the beating frequency of the cells; both were measured after the administration of isoproterenol and GTP. When propranolol was added after the start of the stimulation by isoproterenol, only phospholamban and the 15-kDa protein were rapidly dephosphorylated in close correlation with the decrease of the beating frequency. These results demonstrate for the first time that the permeabilized myocytes retain the functional beta-adrenergic receptor and cellular responses to beta-adrenergic stimulation. They also suggest that cAMP-mediated phosphorylation of proteins, possibly phospholamban and/or the 15-kDa protein, is involved in the increased contractile activity of permeabilized heart cells. |
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