Lysophosphoglycerides in ischemic myocardium effluents and potentiation of their arrhythmogenic effects

1981 ◽  
Vol 241 (5) ◽  
pp. H700-H707 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Snyder ◽  
W. A. Crafford ◽  
J. L. Glashow ◽  
D. Rankin ◽  
B. E. Sobel ◽  
...  

Lysophosphoglycerides accumulate in ischemic myocardium. To determine whether lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) concentrations increase in extracellular fluid and may be arrhythmogenic, the anterior descending coronary artery of the open-chest cat (n = 12) was perfused with a Krebs-albumin solution after 10 min of ischemia and the effluent assayed for LPC. A twofold increase in LPC (0.097 +/- 0.02 to 0.170 +/- 0.03 mM) was observed. Microelectrode intracellular recordings from from normal feline endocardium at pH 7.4 in vitro revealed little change in action potentials when superfused with feline plasma despite augmented LPC to twice normal levels (0.74 mM). However, at pH 6.7, marked changes were elicited by LPC-enriched plasma including diminished resting membrane potential (-96 +/- 1 to -35 +/- 7 mV), amplitude (102 +/- 3 to 36 +/- 8 mV), maximum rate of rise (Vmax) of phase 0 (178 +/- 24 to 26 +/- 11 V/s), and conduction velocity with fractionation of the action potential. Acidified control plasma decreased only Vmax (from 161 to 57 V/s). Thus LPC increases twofold in effluents from cat myocardium in vivo after 10 min of ischemia and, coupled with ischemia-induced acidosis, is sufficient to induce marked electrophysiological derangements in vitro.

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stéphane Perrier ◽  
Eléonore Moreau ◽  
Caroline Deshayes ◽  
Marine El-Adouzi ◽  
Delphine Goven ◽  
...  

AbstractIn the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae, two point mutations in the acetylcholinesterase (ace-1R) and the sodium channel (kdrR) genes confer resistance to organophosphate/carbamate and pyrethroid insecticides, respectively. The mechanisms of compensation that recover the functional alterations associated with these mutations and their role in the modulation of insecticide efficacy are unknown. Using multidisciplinary approaches adapted to neurons isolated from resistant Anopheles gambiae AcerKis and KdrKis strains together with larval bioassays, we demonstrate that nAChRs, and the intracellular calcium concentration represent the key components of an adaptation strategy ensuring neuronal functions maintenance. In AcerKis neurons, the increased effect of acetylcholine related to the reduced acetylcholinesterase activity is compensated by expressing higher density of nAChRs permeable to calcium. In KdrKis neurons, changes in the biophysical properties of the L1014F mutant sodium channel, leading to enhance overlap between activation and inactivation relationships, diminish the resting membrane potential and reduce the fraction of calcium channels available involved in acetylcholine release. Together with the lower intracellular basal calcium concentration observed, these factors increase nAChRs sensitivity to maintain the effect of low concentration of acetylcholine. These results explain the opposite effects of the insecticide clothianidin observed in AcerKis and KdrKis neurons in vitro and in vivo.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Celinda M. Kofron ◽  
Tae Yun Kim ◽  
Fabiola Munarin ◽  
Arvin H. Soepriatna ◽  
Rajeev J. Kant ◽  
...  

AbstractCardiotoxicity of pharmaceutical drugs, industrial chemicals, and environmental toxicants can be severe, even life threatening, which necessitates a thorough evaluation of the human response to chemical compounds. Predicting risks for arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death accurately is critical for defining safety profiles. Currently available approaches have limitations including a focus on single select ion channels, the use of non-human species in vitro and in vivo, and limited direct physiological translation. We have advanced the robustness and reproducibility of in vitro platforms for assessing pro-arrhythmic cardiotoxicity using human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and human cardiac fibroblasts in 3-dimensional microtissues. Using automated algorithms and statistical analyses of eight comprehensive evaluation metrics of cardiac action potentials, we demonstrate that tissue-engineered human cardiac microtissues respond appropriately to physiological stimuli and effectively differentiate between high-risk and low-risk compounds exhibiting blockade of the hERG channel (E4031 and ranolazine, respectively). Further, we show that the environmental endocrine disrupting chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) causes acute and sensitive disruption of human action potentials in the nanomolar range. Thus, this novel human 3D in vitro pro-arrhythmic risk assessment platform addresses critical needs in cardiotoxicity testing for both environmental and pharmaceutical compounds and can be leveraged to establish safe human exposure levels.


2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 629-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muthukrishnan Renganathan ◽  
Theodore R. Cummins ◽  
Stephen G. Waxman

C-type dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons can generate tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) sodium-dependent action potentials. However, multiple sodium channels are expressed in these neurons, and the molecular identity of the TTX-R sodium channels that contribute to action potential production in these neurons has not been established. In this study, we used current-clamp recordings to compare action potential electrogenesis in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) small DRG neurons maintained for 2–8 h in vitro to examine the role of sodium channel Nav1.8 (α-SNS) in action potential electrogenesis. Although there was no significant difference in resting membrane potential, input resistance, current threshold, or voltage threshold in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) DRG neurons, there were significant differences in action potential electrogenesis. Most Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons generate all-or-none action potentials, whereas most of Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons produce smaller graded responses. The peak of the response was significantly reduced in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons [31.5 ± 2.2 (SE) mV] compared with Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons (55.0 ± 4.3 mV). The maximum rise slope was 84.7 ± 11.2 mV/ms in Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons, significantly faster than in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons where it was 47.2 ± 1.3 mV/ms. Calculations based on the action potential overshoot in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) neurons, following blockade of Ca2+ currents, indicate that Nav1.8 contributes a substantial fraction (80–90%) of the inward membrane current that flows during the rising phase of the action potential. We found that fast TTX-sensitive Na+ channels can produce all-or-none action potentials in some Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons but, presumably as a result of steady-state inactivation of these channels, electrogenesis in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons is more sensitive to membrane depolarization than in Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons, and, in the absence of Nav1.8, is attenuated with even modest depolarization. These observations indicate that Nav1.8 contributes substantially to action potential electrogenesis in C-type DRG neurons.


1988 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 1476-1496 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Jones ◽  
U. Heinemann

1. Extracellular recordings were made from slices of hippocampus plus parahippocampal regions maintained in vitro. Field potentials, recorded in the entorhinal cortex after stimulation in the subiculum, resembled those observed in vivo. 2. Washout of magnesium from the slices resulted in paroxysmal events which resembled those occurring during sustained seizures in vivo. These events were greatest in amplitude and duration in layers IV/V of the medial entorhinal cortex and could occur both spontaneously and in response to subicular stimulation. Spontaneous seizure-like events were not prevented by severing the connections between the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex, but much smaller and shorter events occurring in the dentate gyrus were stopped by this manipulation. Both spontaneous and evoked paroxysmal events were blocked by perfusion with the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, DL-2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (2-AP5). 3. Neurons in layers IV/V were characterized by intracellular recording. Injection of depolarizing current in most cells evoked a train of nondecrementing action potentials with only weak spike frequency accommodation and little or no posttrain after hyperpolarization. 4. A small number of cells displayed burst response when depolarized by positive current. The burst consisted of a slow depolarization with superimposed action potentials which decreased in amplitude and increased in duration during the discharge. The burst was terminated by a strong after hyperpolarization and thereafter, during prolonged current pulses a train of nondecrementing spikes occurred. The burst response remained if the cell was held at hyperpolarized levels but was inactivated by holding the cell at a depolarized level. 5. Depolarizing synaptic potentials could be evoked by stimulation in the subiculum. A delayed and prolonged depolarization clearly decremented with membrane hyperpolarization and, occasionally, increased with depolarization. 6. Washout of magnesium from the slices resulted in an enhancement of the late depolarization and a reversal of its voltage dependence. Eventually a single shock to the subiculum evoked a large all-or-none paroxysmal depolarization associated with a massive increase in membrane conductance. Similar events occurred spontaneously in all cells tested. The paroxysmal depolarizations, both spontaneous and evoked, were rapidly blocked by 2-AP5. 7. It is concluded that medial entorhinal cortical cells possess several intrinsic and synaptic properties which confer an extreme susceptibility to generation of sustained seizure activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1984 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 907-912
Author(s):  
S. Javaheri ◽  
A. De Hemptinne ◽  
I. Leusen

The purpose of this study is to systematically describe the construction of pH-sensitive double-barreled microelectrodes for extracellular use. The most important advantages of these microelectrodes are as follows: the reference and the pH barrels are next to each other, and therefore the measured pH is not affected by asymmetric or slowly spreading direct current potential. The diameter of the tip of the microelectrodes is between 7 and 35 micron. These pH-sensitive microelectrodes are generally stable and Nernstian. They can be used repeatedly both in vivo and in vitro to measure tissue extracellular fluid pH. Some applications are described.


1984 ◽  
Vol 247 (3) ◽  
pp. H371-H379 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Anderson ◽  
K. L. Glick ◽  
A. Manring ◽  
C. Crenshaw

Developmental changes in contractility were sought in the fetal and postnatal sheep heart by using postextrasystolic potentiation and force, pressure, and wall-motion measures. Two different preparations were used, isolated myocardium and the chronically instrumented lamb. In the isolated muscle, the following increased significantly with age: force of contraction, the maximum rate of rise of force, and postextrasystolic potentiation. In the intact heart prior to birth [period of study, 20 +/- 4 (SD) days] heart rate (HR) fell significantly, and the following increased significantly: postextrasystolic potentiation [measured with the maximum rate of rise of left ventricular (LV) pressure (Pmax)], LV peak systolic pressure (LVP), end-diastolic dimension (EDD), end-systolic dimension (ESD), and aortic diastolic pressure. After birth, LVP, Pmax, HR, LVEDP, EDD, and ESD increased and postextrasystolic potentiation fell. The latter fall was not found in vitro and probably demonstrates a transient change in contractility, related to hormonal or neural stimulation. Over the subsequent postnatal days (6-122 days), HR fell while potentiation, EDD, and ESD increased significantly. Both in vitro and in vivo, the overall increase in postextrasystolic potentiation demonstrates a similar long-term change in contractility. The similarity of this change to that induced by mild hypertrophy suggests that development and mild hypertrophy alter myocardial contractility through a common mechanism.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (01) ◽  
pp. 1850040
Author(s):  
Muqun Yang ◽  
Tian Guan ◽  
Yonghong He

Infrared neuron stimulation is regarded as an innovative approach for stimulating cochleae in animals while the exact mechanism still remains unknown. In this paper, we studied compound action potentials of guinea pig cochleae with chronic or acute deafness. We recorded optical compound action potentials and analyzed stretched cochlear preparations by fluorescence microscopy. Photoacoustic signals were measured by hydrophone and microphone, respectively. In our experiment, we observed a switch response effect in vitro and in vivo experiments. Therefore, we proposed photoacoustic effect could invoke auditory response in infrared neuron stimulation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 1252-1265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Feng Wang ◽  
Xiao-Bing Gao ◽  
Anthony N. van den Pol

Spikes may play an important role in modulating a number of aspects of brain development. In early hypothalamic development, GABA can either evoke action potentials, or it can shunt other excitatory activity. In both slices and cultures of the mouse hypothalamus, we observed a heterogeneity of spike patterns and frequency in response to GABA. To examine the mechanisms underlying patterns and frequency of GABA-evoked spikes, we used conventional whole cell and gramicidin perforation recordings of neurons ( n = 282) in slices and cultures of developing mouse hypothalamus. Recorded with gramicidin pipettes, GABA application evoked action potentials in hypothalamic neurons in brain slices of postnatal day 2–9( P2- 9) mice. With conventional patch pipettes (containing 29 mM Cl−), action potentials were also elicited by GABA from neurons of 2–13 days in vitro (2–13 DIV) embryonic hypothalamic cultures. Depolarizing responses to GABA could be generally classified into three types: depolarization with no spike, a single spike, or complex patterns of multiple spikes. In parallel experiments in slices, electrical stimulation of GABAergic mediobasal hypothalamic neurons in the presence of glutamate receptor antagonists [10 μM 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), 100 μM 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5)] resulted in the occurrence of spikes that were blocked by bicuculline (20 μM). Blocking ionotropic glutamate receptors with AP5 and CNQX did not block GABA-mediated multiple spikes. Similarly, when synaptic transmission was blocked with Cd2+ (200 μM) and Ni2+(300 μM), GABA still induced multiple spikes, suggesting that the multiple spikes can be an intrinsic membrane property of GABA excitation and were not based on local interneurons. When the pipette [Cl−] was 29 or 45 mM, GABA evoked multiple spikes. In contrast, spikes were not detected with 2 or 10 mM intracellular [Cl−]. With gramicidin pipettes, we found that the mean reversal potential of GABA-evoked current ( E GABA) was positive to the resting membrane potential, suggesting a high intracellular [Cl−] in developing mouse neurons. Varying the holding potential from −80 to 0 mV revealed an inverted U-shaped effect on spike probability. Blocking voltage-dependent Na+ channels with tetrodotoxin eliminated GABA-evoked spikes, but not the GABA-evoked depolarization. Removing Ca2+ from the extracellular solution did not block spikes, indicating GABA-evoked Na+-based spikes. Although E GABA was more positive within 2–5 days in culture, the probability of GABA-evoked spikes was greater in 6- to 9-day cells. Mechanistically, this appears to be due to a greater Na+ current found in the older cells during a period when the E GABA is still positive to the resting membrane potential. GABA evoked similar spike patterns in HEPES and bicarbonate buffers, suggesting that Cl−, not bicarbonate, was primarily responsible for generatingmultiple spikes. GABA evoked either single or multiple spikes; neurons with multiple spikes had a greater Na+ current, a lower conductance, a more negative spike threshold, and a greater difference between the peak of depolarization and the spike threshold. Taken together, the present results indicate that the patterns of multiple action potentials evoked by GABA are an inherent property of the developing hypothalamic neuron.


1985 ◽  
Vol 248 (3) ◽  
pp. G261-G271 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Hubel

The effects of extrinsic and intrinsic nerves on ion and water transport by the intestine are considered and discussed in terms of their possible physiological function. Adrenergic nerves enter the small intestine via mesenteric nerves. Adrenergic tone is usually absent in tissues in vitro but is present in vivo. The nerves increase absorption in response to homeostatic changes associated with acute depletion of extracellular fluid. Cholinergic tone that reduces fluid absorption or causes secretion has been detected in the small intestine of humans, dogs, and cats and in the colon of humans. Extrinsic cholinergic fibers generally do not affect ion transport in small intestine but probably do so in colon. Whether peptides liberated in the mucosa affect enterocytes directly is not clear. Studies on humans and rabbits suggest that the role of substance P is minor. The physiological roles of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and somatostatin remain to be defined. Intraluminal factors also affect ion and water transport. Mucosal rubbing, distension, and cholera toxin cause fluid secretion; acid solutions in the duodenum cause alkaline secretion; these stimuli and hypertonic glucose liberate serotonin into the lumen, the mesenteric venous blood, or both. It has been proposed that the enterochromaffin cell is an epithelial sensory cell that responds to noxious stimuli within the lumen by liberating serotonin. The serotonin initiates a neural reflex through a nicotinic ganglion to liberate a secretagogue that acts on the enterocyte. The function of VIP in this proposed reflex is unclear. The variety of intraluminal stimuli that influence epithelial function implies that there is more than one type of epithelial sensory cell (or sensory mechanism). Prostaglandins may mediate the alkaline secretion caused by acid in the duodenum. There may be other effective substances. Although it has been known for years that intraluminal stimuli affect the coordination of smooth muscle functions, it is not known whether similar stimuli also influence salt and water transport as a meal traverses the alimentary canal.


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