Role of Na+/Ca2+exchange in endothelin-1-induced increases in Ca2+transient and contractility in rabbit ventricular myocytes: pharmacological analysis with KB-R7943

Abstract
1. The effects of endothelin-1 (ET-1) on intracellular Ca2+ ion level and cell contraction were simultaneously investigated in rabbit ventricular cardiac myocytes loaded with indo-1/A1. The role of Na+/Ca2+ exchange in ET-1-induced positive inotropic effect (PIE) was examined by using KB-R7943 (2-[2-[4-(4-nitrobenzyloxy)phenyl]ethyl]isothiourea methanesulphonate), a selective inhibitor of reverse mode Na+/Ca2+ exchange. 2. ET-1 at 0.3 pM - 1 nM increased cell contraction and Ca2+ transient (CaT) with EC50 values of 2.9 pM and 1.2 pM, respectively, and the increase in amplitude of CaT was much smaller relative to the PIE: ET-1 at 1 nM increased peak cell shortening by 237%, while it increased peak CaT by 167%. For a given level of PIE, ET-1-induced increase in CaT was much smaller than that induced by elevation of [Ca2+]o and by isoprenaline. Therefore, ET-1 shifted the relationship between peak CaT and cell shortening to the left relative to the relationship for increase in [Ca2+]o, an indication that ET-1 increased myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity. 3. KB-R7943 at 0.1 microM and higher inhibited contraction and CaT induced by 0.1 nM ET-1 and at 0.3 microM it abolished the increase in CaT while inhibiting the PIE by 48.1%. Over concentration range of 0.1-0.3 microM, KB-R7943 neither inhibited baseline contraction and CaT nor the isoprenaline-induced response, although at 1 microM and higher it had a significant inhibitory action on these responses. 4. These results indicate that in rabbit ventricular myocytes both increases in CaT and myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity contribute to the ET-induced PIE, and the activation of reverse mode Na+/Ca2+ exchange may play a crucial role in increase in CaT induced by ET-1 in rabbit ventricular cardiac myocytes.