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Indirect evidence suggests that fluctuations, or oscillations, in the intracellular free calcium concentration ( Ca2+i) can occur spontaneously in intact cardiac preparations, but such Ca2+i fluctuations have never been demonstrated directly. We used the bioluminescent Ca2+-sensitive protein aequorin to detect fluctuations in the Ca2+i in canine cardiac Purkinje fibers. Noise analysis of the aequorin luminescence reveals prominent peaks of power density at frequencies of 1-4 Hz; these peaks become larger and shift to higher frequencies as the Ca2+i increases. Caffeine and ryanodine abolish the Ca2+i fluctuations, suggesting that Ca2+ release and uptake by the sarcoplasmic reticulum generate these events. When Ca2+i fluctuations are present, less tension is produced at any given level of mean aequorin luminescence. Thus, Ca2+i fluctuations will undermine attempts to relate Ca2+i and force in intact myocardium.
Wier et al. (Thu,) studied this question.