4.6 Article

Diazoxide maintenance of myocyte volume and contractility during stress: Evidence for a non-sarcolemmal KATP channel location

Journal

JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY
Volume 140, Issue 5, Pages 1153-1159

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2010.07.047

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Heart Association [0565514Z]
  2. Thoracic Surgery Foundation for Research and Education

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Objective: Animal and human myocytes demonstrate significant swelling and reduced contractility during exposure to stress (metabolic inhibition, hyposmotic stress, or hyperkalemic cardioplegia), and these detrimental consequences may be inhibited by the addition of diazoxide (adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel opener) via an unknown mechanism. Both SUR1 and SUR2A subunits have been localized to the heart, and mouse sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels are composed of SUR2A/Kir6.2 subunits in the ventricle and SUR1/Kir6.2 subunits in the atria. This study was performed to localize the mechanism of diazoxide by direct probing of sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel current and by genetic deletion of channel subunits. Methods: Sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel current was recorded in isolated wild-type ventricular mouse myocytes during exposure to Tyrode's solution, Tyrode's+100 mu mol/L diazoxide, hyperkalemic cardioplegia, cardioplegia+diazoxide, cardioplegia+100 mu mol/ L pinacidil, or metabolic inhibition using whole-cell voltage clamp (N = 7-12 cells per group). Ventricular myocyte volume was measured from SUR1(-/-) and wild-type mice during exposure to control solution, hyperkalemic cardioplegia, or cardioplegia+100 mu mol/ L diazoxide (N = 7-10 cells per group). Results: Diazoxide did not increase sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium current in wildtype myocytes, although they demonstrated significant swelling during exposure to cardioplegia that was prevented by diazoxide. SUR1(-/-) myocytes also demonstrated significant swelling during exposure to cardioplegia, but this was not altered by diazoxide. Conclusions: Diazoxide does not open the ventricular sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel but provides volume homeostasis via an SUR1-dependent pathway in mouse ventricular myocytes, supporting a mechanism of action distinct from sarcolemmal adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel activation. (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2010;140:1153-9)

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