Cardiovascular System
Tension generation and relaxation in single myofibrils from human atrial and ventricular myocardium
Nicoletta Piroddi1, 2, Alexandra Belus1, 2, Beatrice Scellini1, 2, Chiara Tesi1, 2, Gabriele Giunti1, 4, Elisabetta Cerbai1, 3, Alessandro Mugelli1, 3 and Corrado Poggesi1, 2 
| (1) |
Centro Interuniversitario di Medicina Molecolare e Biofisica Applicata (CIMMBA), Firenze, Italy |
| (2) |
Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiologiche, Università di Firenze, Viale Morgagni 63, 50134 Firenze, Italy |
| (3) |
Dipartimento di Farmacologia Preclinica e Clinica, Università di Firenze, Firenze, Italy |
| (4) |
Divisione di CardioChirurgia, Ospedale Careggi, Firenze, Italy |
Received: 15 September 2006 Accepted: 17 October 2006 Published online: 23 November 2006
Abstract Fast solution switching techniques in single myofibrils offer the opportunity to dissect and directly examine the sarcomeric
mechanisms responsible for force generation and relaxation. The feasibility of this approach is tested here in human cardiac
myofibrils isolated from small samples of atrial and ventricular tissue. At sarcomere lengths between 2.0 and 2.3 μm, resting
tensions were significantly higher in ventricular than in atrial myofibrils. The rate constant of active tension generation
after maximal Ca
2+ activation (
k
ACT) was markedly faster in atrial than in ventricular myofibrils. In both myofibril types
k
ACT was the same as the rate of tension redevelopment after mechanical perturbations and decreased significantly by decreasing
[Ca
2+] in the activating solution. Upon sudden Ca
2+ removal, active tension fully relaxed. Relaxation kinetics were (1) much faster in atrial than in ventricular myofibrils,
(2) unaffected by bepridil, a drug that increases the affinity of troponin for Ca
2+, and (3) strongly accelerated by small increases in inorganic phosphate concentration. The results indicate that myofibril
tension activation and relaxation rates reflect apparent cross-bridge kinetics and their Ca
2+ regulation rather than the rates at which thin filaments are switched on or off by Ca
2+ binding or removal. Myofibrils from human hearts retain intact mechanisms for contraction regulation and tension generation
and represent a viable experimental model to investigate function and dysfunction of human cardiac sarcomeres.
Keywords Cardiac sarcomere - Calcium regulation - Myosin - Titin - Bepridil - Inorganic phosphate
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