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Beyond Bowditch: the convergence of cardiac chronotropy and inotropy
Authors:Lakatta Edward G
Institution:Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA. lakattae@grc.nia.nih.gov
Abstract:The ability of the heart to acutely beat faster and stronger is central to the vertebrate survival instinct. Released neurotransmitters, norepinephrine and epinephrine, bind to beta-adrenergic receptors (beta-AR) on pacemaker cells comprising the sinoatrial node, and to beta-AR on ventricular myocytes to modulate cellular mechanisms that govern the frequency and amplitude, respectively, of the duty cycles of these cells. While a role for sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) cycling via SERCA2 and ryanodine receptors (RyR) has long been appreciated with respect to cardiac inotropy, recent evidence also implicates Ca(2+) cycling with respect to chronotropy. In spontaneously beating primary sinoatrial nodal pacemaker cells, RyR Ca(2+) releases occurring during diastolic depolarization activate the Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX) to produce an inward current that enhances their diastolic depolarization rate, and thus increases their beating rate. beta-AR stimulation synchronizes RyR activation and Ca(2+) release to effect an increased beating rate in pacemaker cells and contraction amplitude in myocytes: in pacemaker cells, the beta-AR stimulation synchronization of RyR activation occurs during the diastolic depolarization, and augments the NCX inward current; in ventricular myocytes, beta-AR stimulation synchronizes the openings of unitary L-type Ca(2+) channel activation following the action potential, and also synchronizes RyR Ca(2+) releases following depolarization, and in the absence of depolarization, both leading to the generation of a global cytosolic Ca(i) transient of increased amplitude and accelerated kinetics. Thus, beta-AR stimulation induced synchronization of RyR activation (recruitment of additional RyRs to fire) and of the ensuing Ca(2+) release cause the heart to beat both stronger and faster, and is thus, a common mechanism that links both the maximum achievable cardiac inotropy and chronotropy.
Keywords:Cardiac pacemaker cells  Cardiac myocytes  Ca2+ cycling  Sarcoplasmic reticulum  Ryanodine receptors  β  -Adrenergic receptor signalling
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