Circulation, Vol 68, 872-882, Copyright © 1983 by American Heart Association
LM Buja, KP Burton, HK Hagler and JT Willerson
The purpose of this study was to use energy dispersive x-ray microanalysis
to test the following hypotheses: (1) that individual myocytes may exhibit
important variation in the severity of alterations in intracellular ionic
homeostasis in response to hypoxia and (2) that hypoxic myocytes may
accumulate certain elements in quantities sufficient to impair organellar
function and structure. A rabbit interventricular septal preparation with
attached small right ventricular papillary muscles was used to obtain
control oxygenated myocardium (six papillary muscles) and myocardium
rendered hypoxic for 1 to 1 1/2 hr (n = 8). Myocardium not perfused in
vitro was also obtained (n = 4). Microanalysis was performed on
freeze-dried thin sections of unfixed papillary muscles. Elemental
concentrations were determined by suitable cryostandards of elements of
interest. Sarcoplasm and mitochondria of most hypoxic myocytes exhibited
significant alterations of diffusible elements, including increases in
sodium and chloride and decreases in potassium, phosphorus, and magnesium,
without major change in calcium. The most severely altered myocytes showed
evidence of calcium overloading manifested by markedly increased levels of
mitochondrial calcium and phosphorus associated with formation of
electron-dense mitochondrial inclusions. Levels of mitochondrial calcium
and phosphorus exceeded those previously found to markedly impair the
function and structure of isolated mitochondria. Thus x-ray microanalysis
of unfixed cryosections provides direct measurements of subcellular
alterations in elemental composition of individual myocytes in injured
myocardium and demonstrates that both calcium and phosphorus accumulate in
mitochondria of severely injured myocytes in concentrations sufficient to
exert deleterious effects on these organelles.
ARTICLES
Quantitative x-ray microanalysis of the elemental composition of individual myocytes in hypoxic rabbit myocardium
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