Electrophysiological and electron microscopic correlations concerning the effects of neuraminidase on canine heart cells.
- 1 February 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 50 (2) , 228-239
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.50.2.228
Abstract
To assess the importance of the glycocalyx in cardiac cells, isolated preparations of sinus node (SN), atrial working muscle (AM), false tendon (FT) and ventricular working muscle (VM) were studied electrophysiologically with intracellular electrodes and then structurally with EM. Twenty isolated canine right atria with attached ventricular tissue were arterially perfused (SN artery, FT were superfused) and at the close of each experiment, ruthenium (Ru) red in a glutaraldehyde fixative solution was substituted for the normal perfusate; this step arrested all cardiac cell activity. The Ru red was found aggregated in a thick (> 500 .ANG.) layer outside the external leaflet of the cell membrane in SN, AM, FT and VM cells; this layer corresponded to the location of the glycocalyx. Similar deposits of Ru red were found inside caveolae, transverse tubules and intercellular junctions. In the SN the glycocalyx demarcated by Ru red differed, in that it surrounded the peripheries of P cell clusters rather than individual P cells. Neither the junction between 2 P cells nor that between P and transitional cells was invaded. Fifteen complete sets of cardiac tissues were treated with neuraminidase (1.0 U/ml) for 1 h or more before the addition of Ru red. In 9 different preparations the Ru red-positive layer became virtually absent after this treatment in SN, AM and VM cells, but the glycocalyx in FT cells remained normal in appearance. Intracellular electrodes in each tissue sample recorded the electrophysiological changes during neuraminidase treatment. Functional importance of the glycocalyx in AM and VM cells was demonstrated by their inability to conduct impulses after neuraminidase treatment. The same treatment in SN cells ultimately abolished their automaticity while, in quiescent FT cells, it evoked spontaneous firing. The glycocalyx (or sialic acid removed by neuraminidase) may play a different role in each of the 2 types of automatic cells. These electrophysiological and ultrastructural results support an important role for the glycocalyx in the canine heart. Removal of part or all of it by neuraminidase promotes aberrant electrical activity in each different type of canine cardiac cell studied.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lack of effect of neuraminidase on responses of isolated guinea-pig heart preparations to ouabainJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1980
- Removal of sialic acid from cardiac sarcolemma does not affect contractile function in electrically stimulated guinea pig left atriaNature, 1980
- Attenuation by magnesium of the electrophysiologic effects of hyperkalemia on human and canine heart cellsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1980
- Neuraminidase dissociates ouabain inotropy from toxicityJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1980
- The role of calcium in the control of myocardial contractility: An updateJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1980
- Influence of neuraminidase treatment on rat heart sarcolemmaJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1980
- Inpocketings of the cell membrane (caveolae) in the rat myocardiumJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1978
- The morphology of the polysaccharide coat of mammalian cellsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Biomembranes, 1972
- Ultrastructure of myocardial cellsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1968
- Effect of Calcium on the Membrane Potentials of Single Pacemaker Fibres and Atrial Fibres in Isolated Rabbit AtriaNature, 1964