Spatiotemporal Characteristics of Junctional and Nonjunctional Focal Ca2+ Release in Rat Atrial Myocytes

SH Woo, L Cleemann, M Morad - Circulation research, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
SH Woo, L Cleemann, M Morad
Circulation research, 2003Am Heart Assoc
Atrial myocytes have two functionally separate Ca2+ release sites: those in peripheral
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) adjacent to the Ca2+ channels of surface membrane and those
in central SR not associated with Ca2+ channels. Recently, we have reported on the gating
of these two different Ca2+ release sites by Ca2+ current. In the present study, we report on
the spatiotemporal properties of focal Ca2+ releases (sparks) occurring spontaneously in
central and peripheral sites of voltage-clamped rat atrial myocytes, using rapid 2 …
Atrial myocytes have two functionally separate Ca2+ release sites: those in peripheral sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) adjacent to the Ca2+ channels of surface membrane and those in central SR not associated with Ca2+ channels. Recently, we have reported on the gating of these two different Ca2+ release sites by Ca2+ current. In the present study, we report on the spatiotemporal properties of focal Ca2+ releases (sparks) occurring spontaneously in central and peripheral sites of voltage-clamped rat atrial myocytes, using rapid 2-dimensional (2-D) confocal Ca2+ imaging. Peripheral and central sparks were similar in size and release time (≈300 000 Ca2+ ions for ≅12 ms), but significantly larger and longer than ventricular sparks. Both sites were resistant to Cd2+ and inhibited by ryanodine. Peripheral sparks were brighter and flattened against surface membrane, had ≈5-fold higher frequency, ≈2 times faster diffusion coefficient, and dissipated abruptly. Central sparks, in contrast, occurred less frequently, were elongated along the cellular longitudinal axis, and dissipated slowly. Compound sparks (composed of 2 to 5 unitary focal releases) aligned longitudinally and occurred more frequently at the center. The diversity of peripheral and central sparks with respect to shape, frequency, and speed of spatial development and decay is consistent with regional ultrastructural heterogeneity of SR. The retarded dissipation of central atrial sparks, and high prevalence of compound sparks in cell center may be critical in facilitating the propagation of Ca2+ waves in atrial myocytes lacking t-tubular system and provide the atrial myocytes with functional Ca2+ signaling diversity. The full text of this article is available at http://www.circresaha.org.
Am Heart Assoc