quiescent rat heart cells
Observation using laser scanning confocal microscope and fluorescent calcium indicator fluo-3, and exposure to ryanodine
Characteristics and kinetics of spontaneous local increases in intracellular calcium concentration (calcium sparks)
The discovery of calcium sparks provides a fundamental explanation for the elementary events underlying excitation-contraction coupling in the mammalian heart.
Spontaneous local increases in the concentration of intracellular calcium, called "calcium sparks," were detected in quiescent rat heart cells with a laser scanning confocal microscope and the fluorescent calcium indicator fluo-3. Estimates of calcium flux associated with the sparks suggest that calcium sparks result from spontaneous openings of single sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium-release channels, a finding supported by ryanodine-dependent changes of spark kinetics. At resting intracellular calcium concentrations, these SR calcium-release channels had a low rate of opening (approximately 0.0001 per second). An increase in the calcium content of the SR, however, was associated with a fourfold increase in opening rate and resulted in some sparks triggering propagating waves of increased intracellular calcium concentration. The calcium spark is the consequence of elementary events underlying excitation-contraction coupling and provides an explanation for both spontaneous and triggered changes in the intracellular calcium concentration in the mammalian heart.
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Heping Cheng
Electrophysiology
W. Jonathan Lederer
Electrophysiology
Mark B. Cannell
Electrophysiology
Science
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Cheng et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9db5b5e5bcb4e3b83823a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.8235594