4.7 Article

Electrophysiological characterization of left ventricular myocytes from obese Sprague-Dawley rat

Journal

OBESITY
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 778-786

Publisher

NORTH AMER ASSOC STUDY OBESITY
DOI: 10.1038/oby.2006.90

Keywords

diet-induced obesity; cardiac ionic currents; leptin receptors

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Objective: Obesity is a complex multifactorial disease that is often associated with cardiac arrhythmias. Various animal models have been used extensively to study the effects of obesity on physiological functions, but, to our knowledge, no study related to ionic membrane currents has been performed on isolated cardiac myocytes. Therefore, we examined the electrophysiological characteristics of four ionic currents from isolated left ventricular myocytes of a high-energy (HE)-induced obesity rat model. Research Methods and Procedures: Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed with either a control diet or a diet containing 33% kcal as fat (HE) for 14 weeks starting at 6 weeks of age. Voltage-clamp experiments were performed on ventricular myocytes. Leptin receptor (ObR) expression was measured using ObR enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results: In the HE group, rats designated as obese did not develop a cardiac hypertrophy, either at the organ level or at the cellular level. Densities and kinetics of the L-type calcium current, the transient outward potassium current, the delayed rectifier potassium current, and the sodium-calcium exchange current (I-NCX) were not significantly different between control and obese rats. A down-regulation of ObR expression was evidenced in the heart of obese rats compared with controls. Acute exposure (5 minutes) of leptin (100 nM) did not induce a significant modification in the current densities either in control or in obese rats, except for I-NCX density measured in control rats. Discussion: The absence of effect of leptin on I-NCX in obese rats could be a potential arrhythmogenic substrate in obesity.

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