PKA treatment of rat cardiac myocytes increased the sarcomere length dependence of peak normalized power output from approximately 20% to 40%.
PKA-induced phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins increases the length dependence of myocyte power output, providing a mechanistic basis for the steeper Frank-Starling relationship observed after beta-adrenergic stimulation.
Absolute Event Rate: 40% vs 20%
p-value: p=<0.05
The Frank-Starling relationship of the heart yields increased stroke volume with greater end-diastolic volume, and this relationship is steeper after beta-adrenergic stimulation. The underlying basis for the Frank-Starling mechanism involves length-dependent changes in both Ca(2+) sensitivity of myofibrillar force and power output. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that PKA-induced phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins would increase the length dependence of myofibrillar power output, which would provide a myofibrillar basis to, in part, explain the steeper Frank-Starling relations after beta-adrenergic stimulation. For these experiments, adult rat left ventricles were mechanically disrupted, permeabilized cardiac myocyte preparations were attached between a force transducer and position motor, and the length dependence of loaded shortening and power output were measured before and after treatment with PKA. PKA increased the phosphorylation of myosin binding protein C and cardiac troponin I, as assessed by autoradiography. In terms of myocyte mechanics, PKA decreased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force and increased loaded shortening and power output at all relative loads when the myocyte preparations were at long sarcomere length ( approximately 2.30 mum). PKA had less of an effect on loaded shortening and power output at short sarcomere length ( approximately 2.0 mum). These changes resulted in a greater length dependence of myocyte power output after PKA treatment; peak normalized power output increased approximately 20% with length before PKA and approximately 40% after PKA. These results suggest that PKA-induced phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins explains, in part, the steeper ventricular function curves (i.e., Frank-Starling relationship) after beta-adrenergic stimulation of the left ventricle.
Hanft et al. (Sat,) conducted a other in Normal cardiac physiology. Protein kinase A (PKA) vs. Baseline (before PKA treatment) was evaluated on Increase in peak normalized power output with increased sarcomere length (p=<0.05). PKA treatment of rat cardiac myocytes increased the sarcomere length dependence of peak normalized power output from approximately 20% to 40%.