4.6 Article

Does the intercept of the heat-stress relation provide an accurate estimate of cardiac activation heat?

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 595, Issue 14, Pages 4725-4733

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP274174

Keywords

crossbridge-dependent heat; crossbridge-independent heat; length-dependence of muscle heat

Funding

  1. National Heart Foundation of New Zealand [1601]
  2. National Heart Foundation of New Zealand: Post-Doctoral Fellowships
  3. National Heart Foundation of New Zealand: PhD Scholarship
  4. Marsden Fund
  5. Government funding

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Activation heat arises from two sources during the contraction of striated muscle. It reflects the metabolic expenditure associated with Ca2+ pumping by the sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+-ATPase and Ca2+ translocation by the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger coupled to the Na+,K+-ATPase. In cardiac preparations, investigators are constrained in estimating its magnitude by reducing muscle length to the point where macroscopic twitch force vanishes. But this experimental protocol has been criticised since, at zero force, the observed heat may be contaminated by residual crossbridge cycling activity. To eliminate this concern, the putative thermal contribution from crossbridge cycling activity must be abolished, at least at minimal muscle length. We achieved this using blebbistatin, a selective inhibitor of myosin II ATPase. Using a microcalorimeter, we measured the force production and heat output, as functions of muscle length, of isolated rat trabeculae from both ventricles contracting isometrically at 5 Hz and at 37 degrees C. In the presence of blebbistatin (15 mu mol l(-1)), active force was zero but heat output remained constant, at all muscle lengths. Activation heat measured in the presence of blebbistatin was not different from that estimated from the intercept of the heat-stress relation in its absence. We thus reached two conclusions. First, activation heat is independent of muscle length. Second, residual crossbridge heat is negligible at zero active force; hence, the intercept of the cardiac heat-force relation provides an estimate of activation heat uncontaminated by crossbridge cycling. Both results resolve long-standing disputes in the literature.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available