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Cell contraction and relaxation were measured in single voltage-clamped guinea pig cardiomyocytes to investigate the contribution of sarcolemmal Na+-Ca2+ exchange to mechanical relaxation. Cells clamped from -80 to 0 millivolts displayed initial phasic and subsequent tonic contractions; caffeine reduced or abolished the phasic and enlarged the tonic contraction. The rate of relaxation from tonic contractions was steeply voltage-dependent and was significantly slowed in the absence of a sarcolemmal Na+ gradient. Tonic contractions elicited in the absence of a Na+ gradient promptly relaxed when external Na+ was applied, reflecting activation of Na+-Ca2+ exchange. It appears that a voltage-dependent Na+-Ca2+ exchange can rapidly mechanically relax mammalian heart muscle.
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John H.B. Bridge
University of California, Riverside
Kenneth W. Spitzer
University of Utah
Philip R. Ershler
University of Utah
Science
University of Utah
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Bridge et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20798acbc595e19031812a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3406740