6533b829fe1ef96bd128aeb7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Oxygen and substrate deprivation on isolated rat cardiac myocytes : temporal relationship between electromechanical and biochemical consequences

Annick ChevalierPierre AthiasElisabeth FantiniShorheh KhatamiMartine CourtoisAlain Grynberg

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsPhysiology[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Action Potentialschemistry.chemical_element030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyBiologyGLYCOSEACIDE LACTIQUEOxygenMembrane PotentialsContractility03 medical and health sciencesAdenosine Triphosphate0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicineAnimalsMyocyteHypoxiaCells Cultured030304 developmental biologyPharmacologyFREQUENCE0303 health sciencesL-Lactate DehydrogenaseMyocardiumRats Inbred StrainsBiological activityGeneral MedicineHypoxia (medical)Myocardial ContractionRatsElectrophysiologyATP[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]ElectrophysiologyGlucoseEndocrinologychemistryCell cultureCirculatory systemLactatesBiophysicsRATmedicine.symptom

description

The effects of hypoxia and reoxygenation on action potentials (AP), contractions, and certain biochemical parameters were studied in isolated rat ventricular myocytes in monolayer culture in the presence and absence of glucose. Substrate deprivation alone had no influence on the basal properties. In the presence of glucose, a 4-h hypoxic treatment caused only a moderate decrease in AP amplitude and rate. In substrate-free conditions, hypoxia induced a gradual decline in plateau potential level and in AP duration and rate, followed by rhythm abnormalities and a failure of the electromechanical coupling. Spontaneous AP generation then ceased, and the resting potential decreased with increased duration of hypoxia. These alterations were associated with a decrease in ATP content, an increase in the lactate production, and a leakage of about 50% of the total cellular lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Cells reoxygenated after 150 min hypoxia recovered near-normal function, while the ATP depletion ceased and the rate of lactate and LDH loss was diminished. Conversely, cells reoxygenated after 4 h hypoxia exhibited a further decrease of the residual resting polarization and no change in the decline of intracellular ATP and in the efflux of cytosolic lactate and LDH. The results of this study indicate that (1) the sequence and the extent of functional alterations are dependent on the duration of hypoxia in the absence of exogenous substrate and (2) ATP depletion and the amount of lactate and LDH released during hypoxia are related to the shift from reversibly to irreversibly damaged cells.Key words: cultured rat cardiomyocytes, electromechanical properties, hypoxia–reoxygenation, glucose deprivation, enzyme release.

https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02710219