Increase of Labeled Calcium Uptake in Heart Muscle during Potassium Lack Contracture
Open Access
- 30 June 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 43 (6), 1193-1206
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.43.6.1193
Abstract
Analyses of ashed muscle tissue show that the uptake of Ca45 by isolated frog heart ventricles from normal Ringer''s solution containing 1 m[image] Ca reaches a maximum value in about 30 minutes of perfusion which is not exceeded after 3 hours of perfusion. The average amount of this labeled Ca taken up from normal Ringer''s in 0.7 m[image]/kg. wet weight of muscle. In contrast to this, the amount of labeled Ca taken up by ventricles perfused with K-free Ringer''s increases at a linear rate over a 60 minute period to twice the normal value coinciding with the gradual development of contracture and coinciding with a cellular K loss and Na gain of about 30 m[image]/kg. How much of the extra labeled Ca taken up from K-free Ringer''s represents a net gain in cellular Ca content is not known. However, evidence has been obtained that some of this labeled Ca enters an intracellular compartment. EDTA in K-free Ringer''s solution causes relaxation of ventricles in contracture and also renders the muscle fibers indiscriminately permeable. This indicates that a combination of Ca with sensitive intracellular sites is probably the cause of the K lack contracture.Keywords
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