4.3 Article

9-Phenanthrol and flufenamic acid inhibit calcium oscillations in HL-1 mouse cardiomyocytes

Journal

CELL CALCIUM
Volume 54, Issue 3, Pages 193-201

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceca.2013.06.003

Keywords

HL-1 cardiomyocytes; TRPM4; [Ca2+](i)

Categories

Funding

  1. American Physiological Society
  2. NIH [GM083016, HL071837, GM53522]

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It is well established that intracellular calcium ([Ca2+](i)) controls the inotropic state of the myocardium, and evidence mounts that a Ca2+ clock controls the chronotropic state of the heart. Recent findings describe a calcium-activated nonselective cation channel (NSCCa) in various cardiac preparations sharing hallmark characteristics of the transient receptor potential melastatin 4 (TRPM4). TRPM4 is functionally expressed throughout the heart and has been implicated as a NSCCa that mediates membrane depolarization. However, the functional significance of TRPM4 in regards to Ca2+ signaling and its effects on cellular excitability and pacemaker function remains inconclusive. Here, we show by Fura2 Ca-imaging that pharmacological inhibition of TRPM4 in HL-1 mouse cardiac myocytes by 9-phenanthrol (10 mu M) and flufenamic acid (10 and 100 mu M) decreases Ca2+ oscillations followed by an overall increase in [Ca2+](i). The latter occurs also in HL-1 cells in Ca2+-free solution and after depletion of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ with thapsigargin (10 mu M). These pharmacologic agents also depolarize HL-1 cell mitochondrial membrane potential. Furthermore, by on-cell voltage clamp we show that 9-phenanthrol reversibly inhibits membrane current; by fluorescence immunohistochemistry we demonstrate that HL-1 cells display punctate surface labeling with TRPM4 antibody; and by immunoblotting using this antibody we show these cells express a 130-150 kDa protein, as expected for TRPM4. We conclude that 9-phenanthrol inhibits TRPM4 ion channels in HL-1 cells, which in turn decreases Ca2+ oscillations followed by a compensatory increase in [Ca2+](i) from an intracellular store other than the sarcoplasmic reticulum. We speculate that the most likely source is the mitochondrion. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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