Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
2001 Oct;5(5):397-405.
Unchanged protein level of ryanodine receptor but reduced (3H) ryanodine
binding of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum from diabetic cardiomyopathy
rats
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Pharmacology, University of Ulsan College
of Medicine, 388-1 Poongnapdong, Songpa-gu, Seoul, 138-736, South Korea. hwkim@amc.seoul.kr
Abstract
- The ryanodine receptor, a Ca2+ release channel of the
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), is responsible for the rapid release of Ca2+
that activates cardiac muscle contraction. In the excitation-contraction
coupling cascade, activation of SR Ca2+ release channel is initiated by
the activity of sarcolemmal Ca2+ channels, the dihydropyridine receptors.
Previous study showed that the relaxation defect of diabetic heart was
due to the changes of the expressional levels of SR Ca2+ ATPase and
phospholamban. In the diabetic heart contractile abnormalities were also
observed, and one of the mechanisms for these changes could include
alterations in the expression and/or activity levels of various Ca2+
regulatory proteins involving cardiac contraction. In the present study,
underlying mechanisms for the functional derangement of the diabetic
cardiomyopathy were investigated with respect to ryanodine receptor, and
dihydropyridine receptor at the transcriptional and translational levels.
Quantitative changes of ryanodine receptors and the dihydropyridine
receptors, and the functional consequences of those changes in diabetic
heart were investigated. The levels of protein and mRNA of the ryanodine
receptor in diabetic rats were comparable to these of the control.
However, the binding capacity of ryanodine was significantly decreased in
diabetic rat hearts. Furthermore, the reduction in the binding capacity
of ryanodine receptor was completely restored by insulin. This result
suggests that there were no transcriptional and translational changes but
functional changes, such as conformational changes of the Ca2+ release
channel, which might be regulated by insulin. The protein level of the
dihydropyridine receptor and the binding capacity of nitrendipine in the
sarcolemmal membranes of diabetic rats were not different as compared to
these of the control. In conclusion, in diabetic hearts, Ca2+ release
processes are impaired, which are likely to lead to functional
derangement of contraction of heart. This dysregulation of intracellular
Ca2+ concentration could explain for clinical findings of diabetic
cardiomyopathy and provide the scientific basis for more effective
treatments of diabetic patients. In view of these results, insulin may be
involved in the control of intracellular Ca2+ in the cardiomyocyte via
unknown mechanism, which needs further study.