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Uptake-leak balance of SR Ca 2+ determines arrhythmogenic potential of RyR420Q+/- cardiomyocytes

Authors

Lopez, Ruben , Janicek, Radoslav , FERNANDEZ TENORIO, MIGUEL, Courtehoux, Marianne , Matas, Lluis , Gerbaud, Pascale , Gomez, Ana M. , Egger, Marcel , Niggli, Ernst

External publication

No

Means

J. Mol. Cell. Cardiol.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

5

SJR Impact

1.312

Publication date

01/09/2022

ISI

000808466400001

Abstract

Mutations of the RyR2 are channelopathies that can predispose to life threatening catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardias (CPVTs) during exercise or stress. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that are causal for the arrhythmias downstream of the beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR) activation are not defined. They may be specific and different for each particular RyR2 mutation. Obvious possibilities are the phosphorylation of the mutated RyR2s or the stimulation of the SR Ca2+ pump (SERCA), which could increase SR Ca2+ loading. Potentially arrhythmogenic Ca2+ signals, such as Ca2+ waves, were recorded and analyzed from WT and RyR2R420Q+/- mouse cardiomyocytes with confocal microscopy after field stimulation at 1 Hz. In RyR2R420Q+/- cardiomyocytes we found a higher occurrence and frequency of Ca2+ waves, particularly upon beta-AR stimulation with isoproterenol. This was accompanied by a shorter latency to the first spontaneous wave. Wave velocity from raw traces, as well as amplitude and decay time constant (r) analyzed in de-skewed traces were comparable in both cell types. To obtain further insight into the role of the SERCA we selectively stimulated SERCA in permeabilized myocytes using Fab fragments of a PLB antibody (2D12). Surprisingly, SERCA stimulation alone resulted in considerably higher wave frequencies than when mimicking beta-AR stimulation with cAMP, particularly in RyR2R420Q+/- cardiomyocytes. This may be a consequence of some protective SR Ca2+ unloading resulting from the SR Ca2+ leak via phosphorylated RyR2s in cAMP. Spark-to-spark recovery analysis suggested a remarkably higher Ca2+ release sensitivity in RyR2R420Q+/- cells, both in control and upon beta-AR stimulation. Together these findings suggest that the fine balance between SR Ca2+ loading via SERCA and the Ca2+ leak via mutated and phosphorylated RyR2s is an important determinant for the overall cellular arrhythmogenicity prevailing in the RyR2R420Q+/- myocytes.

Keywords

Calcium signaling; Ryanodine receptor; Channelopathy; Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium pump; Arrhythmia; Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular; tachycardia

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