Treatment of adult canine Purkinje fibers with pertussis toxin resulted in 100% of fibers showing increased automaticity in response to phenylephrine, compared to 37% of untreated fibers.
Canine Purkinje fiber automaticity
Pertussis toxin and phenylephrine vs Tyrode's solution alone (no pertussis toxin) (Pertussis toxin 0.1-0.5 microgram/ml; Phenylephrine 5 x 10(-9)-5 x 10(-8) M)
Increased automaticity in response to phenylephrine
We previously have shown that alpha-adrenergic stimulation of canine Purkinje fibers and rat ventricle decreases automaticity. Experiments on rat ventricular myocytes in tissue culture have suggested that the decrease in automaticity induced by alpha-adrenergic stimulation depends on the development of sympathetic innervation and the presence of a pertussis toxin-sensitive, 41-kDa guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-regulatory protein. In the present study, microelectrode and biochemical techniques were used to test the role of the pertussis toxin-sensitive protein and sympathetic innervation in modulating automaticity of adult canine Purkinje fibers. Fibers were incubated in Tyrode's solution alone or in Tyrode's solution plus pertussis toxin (0.1-0.5 microgram/ml) for 24 hours and were then superfused with phenylephrine. Phenylephrine in the 5 x 10(-9)-5 x 10(-8) M range induced a decrease in automaticity in 63% of the 16 fibers not treated with pertussis toxin and an increase in automaticity in 37%. The former group had a higher level of pertussis toxin-sensitive substrate by the 32Pnicotinamide adenine dinucleotide adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-ribosylation assay than the latter. In contrast, all fibers treated with pertussis toxin (0.5 microgram/ml) showed increased automaticity in response to phenylephrine and had no detectable pertussis toxin-sensitive substrate. Over the range of pertussis toxin concentrations studied, there was a smooth concentration-response relation between the substrate levels measured and the automatic response to phenylephrine. As ADP-ribosylatable substrate levels decreased, the percent of fibers showing an increase in automaticity increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Michael R. Rosen
Susan F. Steinberg
Y K Chow
Circulation Research
Columbia University
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Rosen et al. (Mon,) conducted a other in Canine Purkinje fiber automaticity. Pertussis toxin and phenylephrine vs. Tyrode's solution alone (no pertussis toxin) was evaluated on Increased automaticity in response to phenylephrine. Treatment of adult canine Purkinje fibers with pertussis toxin resulted in 100% of fibers showing increased automaticity in response to phenylephrine, compared to 37% of untreated fibers.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a15378d79ff98d0de4e44cf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.62.2.315
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