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Circulation. 2009;119:788-796
Published online before print February 2, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.817379
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(Circulation. 2009;119:788-796.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.


Arrhythmia/Electrophysiology

Intracellular Calcium Dynamics and Acceleration of Sinus Rhythm by β-Adrenergic Stimulation

Boyoung Joung, MD, PhD; Liang Tang, PhD; Mitsunori Maruyama, MD; Seongwook Han, MD, PhD; Zhenhui Chen, PhD; Marcelle Stucky, BS; Larry R. Jones, PhD; Michael C. Fishbein, MD; James N. Weiss, MD; Peng-Sheng Chen, MD; Shien-Fong Lin, PhD

From the Krannert Institute of Cardiology and the Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis (B.J., L.T., M.M., S.H., Z.C., M.S., L.R.J., P.C., S.L.); and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (M.C.F.) and Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, and Department of Physiology (J.N.W.), David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles.

Correspondence to Shien-Fong Lin, PhD, 1801 N Capitol Ave, E 308, Indianapolis, IN 46202. E-mail linsf{at}iupui.edu

Received August 25, 2008; accepted December 8, 2008.


*    Abstract
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Background— Recent evidence indicates that membrane voltage and Ca2+ clocks jointly regulate sinoatrial node (SAN) automaticity. Here we test the hypothesis that sinus rate acceleration by β-adrenergic stimulation involves synergistic interactions between these clock mechanisms.

Methods and Results— We simultaneously mapped intracellular calcium (Cai) and membrane potential in 25 isolated canine right atrium, using previously described criteria of the timing of late diastolic Cai elevation (LDCAE) relative to the action potential upstroke to detect the Ca2+ clock. Before isoproterenol, the earliest pacemaking site occurred in the inferior SAN, and LDCAE was observed in only 4 of 25 preparations. Isoproterenol infusion (1 µmol/L) increased sinus rate and shifted pacemaking site to superior SAN, concomitant with the appearance of LDCAE preceding the action potential upstroke by 98±31 ms. Caffeine had similar effects, whereas sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ depletion with ryanodine and thapsigargin prevented isoproterenol-induced LDCAE and blunted sinus rate acceleration. Cai transient relaxation time during isoproterenol was shorter in superior SAN (124±34 ms) than inferior SAN (138±24 ms; P=0.01) or right atrium (164±33 ms; P=0.001) and was associated with a lower sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase pump to phospholamban protein ratio in SAN than in right atrium. Hyperpolarization-activated pacemaker current (If) blockade with ZD 7288 modestly blunted but did not prevent LDCAE or sinus rate acceleration by isoproterenol.

Conclusions— Acceleration of the Ca2+ clock in the superior SAN plays an important role in sinus acceleration during β-adrenergic stimulation, interacting synergistically with the voltage clock to increase sinus rate.


Key Words: calcium • nervous system, sympathetic • sarcoplasmic reticulum • sinoatrial node


*    Introduction
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Spontaneous diastolic depolarization (DD) of sinoatrial node (SAN) cells periodically initiates action potentials (APs) to set the rhythm of the heart. The mechanism of spontaneous DD has traditionally been attributed to a "voltage clock" mechanism, mediated by voltage-sensitive membrane currents, such as the hyperpolarization-activated pacemaker current (If) regulated by cAMP.1,2 However, recent studies implicate a complementary "Ca2+ clock" mechanism mediated by Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) causing DD via activation of Na-Ca exchanger current (INCX), which coordinately regulates sinus rate along with the voltage clock.3–11 Because the intact SAN is a heterogeneous structure that includes multiple different cell types interacting with each other, the relative importance of the voltage and Ca2+ clocks for pacemaking in different regions of the SAN, and in response to neurohumoral stimuli such as β-agonists, may be different. Indeed, activation maps in intact canine right atrium (RA) showed that SAN impulse origin is multicentric,12 and sympathetic stimulation predictably results in a cranial (superior) shift of the pacemaking site in human and dogs.13 On the basis of evidence from isolated SAN myocytes showing that late diastolic Ca elevation (LDCAE) relative to the AP upstroke is a key signature of pacemaking by the Ca2+ clock,3–11 we examined whether this criterion could provide insight into the relative importance of the Ca2+ and voltage clock mechanisms to pacemaking in intact SAN tissue. To test this hypothesis, we performed dual optical mapping of transmembrane potential (Vm) and intracellular calcium (Cai) in intact canine SAN and RA under control conditions, during isoproterenol infusion, and in response to other pharmacological interventions.

Clinical Perspective p 796


*    Methods
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*Methods
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Langendorff-Perfused Canine SAN Preparation
This study protocol was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Indiana University School of Medicine and the Methodist Research Institute and conforms to the guidelines of the American Heart Association. We studied isolated canine RA in 25 mongrel dogs (weight, 22 to 28 kg). The heart was rapidly excised under general anesthesia, and the right coronary artery was perfused with 37°C Tyrode’s solution equilibrated with 95% O2 and 5% CO2 to maintain a pH of 7.4. The composition of Tyrode’s solution was as follows (in mmol/L): 125 NaCl, 4.5 KCl, 0.25 MgCl2, 24 NaHCO3, 1.8 NaH2PO4, 1.8 CaCl2, and 5.5 glucose. The coronary perfusion pressure was regulated between 50 and 60 mm Hg. To ensure adequate atrial perfusion, all ventricular coronary branches were tied off. Both ventricles and left atrium were removed. Contractility was inhibited by 10 to 17 µmol/L of blebbistatin,14 and the motion artifact was negligible even after isoproterenol infusion (online-only Data Supplement Figure I). Pseudo-ECG was recorded with widely spaced bipolar RA electrodes with the use of isoproterenol-DAM8A (World Precision Instruments).

Dual Vm and Cai Recordings
The hearts were stained with Rhod-2-AM and RH237 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Ore) and excited with laser light at 532 nm.15 Fluorescence was collected with the use of 2 cameras (MiCAM Ultima, BrainVision, Tokyo, Japan) at 1 ms per frame and 100x100 pixels with spatial resolution of 0.35x0.35 mm2 per pixel. After baseline spontaneous beats were mapped, pharmacological intervention was performed. Isoproterenol infusion (1 µmol/L) was used in 11 of 25 dogs, including 5 dogs in which we determined the isoproterenol dose response of sinus rate. In 3 dogs, the ryanodine dose response of heart rate was evaluated. In the same dogs, we also determined the isoproterenol dose response of heart rate during ryanodine infusion of 3 µmol/L. In the remaining 11 dogs, the pharmacological interventions were as follows: caffeine (20 mmol/L, 2 mL) given as a bolus injection within 1 second (n=2), caffeine (0.2 and 0.5 mmol/L) continuous infusion (n=2) including a dog with caffeine (20 mmol/L) continuous infusion, isoproterenol (1 µmol/L) to induce LDCAE and then followed by ryanodine (3 µmol/L) (n=2), ryanodine (10 µmol/L) plus thapsigargin (200 nmol/L) without and then with isoproterenol infusion (1 µmol/L) (n=2), and ZD 7288 (3 µmol/L) without and then with isoproterenol infusion (1 µmol/L) (n=3).

Histology and Calcium Handling Protein Assay
The tissues were fixed in 4% buffered formalin for 1 hour, followed by storage in 70% alcohol, processed routinely, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin and with trichrome for histopathological studies. We also performed immunostaining of HCN4 with rabbit anti-HCN4 polyclonal antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc, Santa Cruz, Calif) at 1:100 dilution. Microscopic examination was performed to confirm the correct localization of SAN.

Superior and inferior parts of SAN and RA were collected in 4 dogs. SERCA2a and phospholamban are detected by the anti-SERCA2a monoclonal antibody 2A7A1 and the anti-phospholamban monoclonal antibody 1F1, respectively.16 The SERCA2a/phospholamban ratio was evaluated. Antibody-binding protein bands were visualized by 125I-protein A and quantified with a Bio-Rad Personal Fx Phosphorimager.

Data Analysis
Sinus rate was defined as the rate generated by sinus node activations confirmed with optical mapping. We used the term heart rate to describe the activation rate determined by pseudo-ECG tracings only. The Cai and Vm traces were normalized to their respective peak-to-peak amplitude for comparison of timing and morphology. The mean surface area of SAN was measured by the summation of pixel areas showing DD in Vm tracing (Figure 1A and 1B). The slopes of LDCAE (Figures 2 and 3Down) and DD during isoproterenol infusion were measured from the onsets of LDCAE and DD (red arrows, Figure 3C) to peak levels of LDCAE and DD, respectively (broken arrows, Figure 3C). The onsets of LDCAE and DD were defined by the time of the transition between negative to positive values in dCai/dt and dVm/dt curves (arrows, Figure 3E). Linear regression was used to determine the correlation between sinus rate and the LDCAE or DD slopes. The 90% Cai relaxation time was measured from the maximum systolic Cai to 90% reduction of Cai. Student t tests were used to compare means between 2 groups. ANOVA with Fisher’s least significant difference post hoc test was used to compare the means among 3 and 4 groups. Data were presented as mean±SEM. A probability value of ≤0.05 was considered statistically significant.


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Figure 1. Identification of SAN. A, Intact canine RA preparation. The white shaded area is the SAN. The numbers show the Vm recording sites in B. B, Vm (blue) recording of a spontaneous sinus beat. Vm was recorded in SAN (sites 1 to 4), inferior (site 5), posterior (sites 6 to 10), and anterior (sites 11 to 15) to SAN. Vm of SAN only shows typical phase 4 DD (arrows). C, Masson’s trichrome staining of SAN and adjacent RA. The general outline of the SAN is indicated with the black arrows. RAA indicates RA appendage; IVC, inferior vena cava; SVC, superior vena cava; ST, sulcus terminalis; A, anterior; P, posterior; S, superior; and I, inferior.


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Figure 2. Activation pattern of SAN and surrounding RA during baseline spontaneous sinus beat. A, Isochronal map. The number on each isochronal line indicates the time of activation (ms), with the earliest activation as time zero. The white shaded area is the SAN. B, The Vm (blue) and Cai (red) recordings from the superior (a), middle (b), and inferior (c) SAN and RA (d) are presented in A. Arrows point to LDCAE. C, Magnified view of Cai and Vm tracings of inferior SAN. Note that LDCAE (arrow) occurred before phase 0 of AP (0 ms) and much earlier than the P wave on ECG. D, Cai and Vm ratio maps at times from –40 ms before to 20 ms after phase 0 AP of C.


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Figure 3. Activation pattern of SAN and surrounding RA during isoproterenol infusion of 0.3 µmol/L. A, Isochronal map of Vm. The number on each isochronal line indicates time (ms). White shaded area is the SAN. B, The Vm (blue) and Cai (red) recordings from the superior (a), middle (b), and inferior (c) SA nodes and RA (d) are presented in A. C, Magnified view of Cai and Vm tracings of superior SAN. Note the robust LDCAE (solid arrow) before phase 0 of AP (0 ms), which in turn was much earlier than onset of P wave on ECG. D, The Vm and Cai ratio maps at times from –60 ms before to 180 ms after phase 0 AP of C. The LDCAE (broken arrows in frame –40 and –20 ms) was followed by the Cai sinkhole during early diastole (solid arrow in frame 180 ms). E, Cai and dCai/dt (a), Vm and dVm/dt (b). The onsets of LDCAE and DD are marked with arrows.

The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data. All authors have read and agree to the manuscript as written.


*    Results
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Identification of SAN
The baseline sinus rate was 95±18 bpm (range, 81 to 134 bpm). Because SAN is subepicardial in dogs,17 we mapped the epicardial side of the tissue (Figure 1A). The APs in the SAN (sites 1 to 4) exhibited spontaneous phase 4 DD (arrows in Figure 1B), whereas the RA (sites 5 to 15) did not. Sites with DD were typically located posterior to the sulcus terminalis and along the SAN artery (dashed line in Figure 1A). The mean surface area of SAN was 41.2±7.7 mm2 (indicated by white colored area in Figure 1A). The correct identification of the SAN was confirmed by histological studies (Figure 1C) and by immunostaining of anti-HCN4 (online-only Data Supplement Figure II).

Figure 2A shows the isochronal map during spontaneous sinus rhythm. Activation in the Vm map was earliest in the anteroinferior region of the SAN (site c). Conduction velocity within SAN was slow, taking 21 ms for the impulse to travel from inferior SAN (dark blue line) to superior SAN (red line). The conduction velocity to the posterior sulcus terminalis was slower than to the anterior sulcus, as indicated by the crowded isochronal lines in the superior vena cava direction. The upstrokes of Cai and Vm fluorescence were nearly simultaneous (Figure 2B and 2C), with the AP upstroke preceding the Cai transient upstroke by an average of 2.7±2.0 ms. In comparison, during RA pacing, the AP upstroke preceded Cai transient upstroke by 11.6±4.7 ms in the same area. Small-amplitude LDCAE was observed at inferior SAN in 4 of 25 preparations during baseline recording (arrows in Figure 2B to 2D). In the remaining 21 preparations, no LDCAE was observed at baseline. Under basal conditions, the leading pacemaker sites were located in the inferior and middle SANs in 18 and 7 preparations, respectively.

Effects of β-Adrenergic Stimulation
Robust LDCAE in SAN During Isoproterenol Infusion
Isoproterenol infusion resulted in an upward (cranial) shift of the earliest activation site to superior SAN (site a, Figure 3A), coincident with the appearance of robust LDCAE (arrows in Figure 3B) in this region in all 11 preparations. The conduction time from superior SAN (site a) to inferior SAN (site c) was 10 ms. LDCAE in the superior SAN preceded the phase 0 AP upstroke by 98.4±31.0 ms (from red arrow to 0 ms in Figure 3C) and was associated with an acceleration of the rate of DD. In contrast, optical tracings from the inferior SAN (site c) and RA (site d) showed no LDCAE, with the Cai transient upstroke always occurring after the AP upstroke. The patterns of activation between –60 and 180 ms of Figure 3C are shown in Figure 3D. The figure shows that the superior SAN had the earliest elevation in Cai fluorescence (broken arrow, –40 ms, Figure 3D). This site also showed the most rapid recovery during late diastole (arrow, 180 ms, Figure 3D). Because the recovery of Cai fluorescence at the superior SAN was relatively early, the optical map at 180 ms showed an area of low Cai fluorescence surrounded by areas of high Cai fluorescence (Cai sinkhole).

Cai and Vm Characteristics Around the Leading Pacemaker Site
During isoproterenol infusion, LDCAE and DD slopes were steepest at the leading pacemaker site (asterisks in Figure 4A) and progressively decreased toward the periphery of SAN. The LDCAE and DD were absent >3 mm away from the leading pacemaker site in the anterior and posterior directions (Figure 4B and 4D) but were present up to 5 to 6 mm inferior to the leading pacemaker site (Figure 4C and 4D). The LDCAE peak amplitude (arrow, Figure 4B) occurred before the AP upstroke. LDCAE onset was always the earliest at the leading pacemaker site and was progressively delayed toward the periphery of SAN (online-only Data Supplement Figure IIIA). The slope of LDCAE (Figure 4D) was always higher at the leading pacemaker site than other SAN sites.


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Figure 4. The spatial changes of Cai and Vm around the leading pacemaker site (asterisk) in SAN. A, The Cai and Vm ratio maps showing recording site. B, The changes of Cai and Vm tracings along the anterior (A)-posterior (P) direction. C, The changes of Cai and Vm tracings along the superior (S)-inferior (I) direction. D, The spatial change of LDCAE and DD slopes.

Progressive Superior Shift of Both LDCAE and Leading Pacemaker Sites
There was progressive and concomitant upward shift of both the leading pacemaker site and peak LDCAE during isoproterenol infusion (Figure 5A). At 95 bpm, for example, sites 4 and 5 had the most prominent LDCAE (asterisks). When the sinus rate increased to 173 bpm, however, site 2 had the most prominent LDCAE. These upward LDCAE shifts were observed in all hearts studied during isoproterenol infusion and always colocalized with the leading pacemaker site.


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Figure 5. Colocalization of LDCAE and the leading pacemaker site. A, Upward shift of the leading pacemaker site with LDCAE during isoproterenol infusion. a, Cai ratio maps of SAN at each sinus rate. b, Corresponding Cai tracings from superior (1, 2), middle (3, 4), and inferior (5, 6) SAN. At 95 bpm, sites 4 and 5 had the most prominent LDCAE (asterisks). As sinus rate gradually increased, the sites of Cai elevation progressively moved upward. At the maximum sinus rate of 173 bpm, site 2 had the most apparent LDCAE. B, Differential responses of different SAN sites to isoproterenol. a, The Cai and Vm tracings from inferior, middle, and superior SAN sites at different sinus rates. b, The LDCAE (red) and DD (blue) slopes of superior SAN at different sinus rates.

Differential Responses of Different SAN Sites to Isoproterenol Infusion
Figure 5Ba compares the Cai and Vm tracings recorded at inferior, middle, and superior SAN as isoproterenol was increased from 0.01 to 1.0 µmol/L. When sinus rate was <100 bpm, the inferior SAN served as the pacemaking site but did not show clear LDCAE. When the sinus rate progressively increased, LDCAE (asterisks) appeared in the middle and then superior regions as the pacemaking sites progressively moved upward. The superior SAN served as the leading pacemaker site at sinus rates >120 bpm. The LDCAE and DD slopes in the superior SAN showed a significant positive correlation with the increase of sinus rate (Figure 5Bb). The LDCAE slope at the leading pacemaker site, which was located at different sites within the SAN during increasing doses of isoproterenol infusion, was also well correlated with the increase of sinus rate (online-only Data Supplement Figure IIIB).

Typical Cai Dynamics of the Leading Pacemaker Sites During Isoproterenol Infusion
Figure 6A compares the morphologies of Cai tracing at SAN (sites 1 to 3) and RA (sites 4 to 5) during isoproterenol infusion. There were no morphological differences of Cai tracings between the leading pacemaker sites and other RA sites at baseline before isoproterenol infusion (Figure 6Ab). After isoproterenol infusion, the morphology of Cai tracing at the leading pacemaker (site 1) was characterized not only by the earliest onset of LDCAE (asterisk) but also by the fastest Cai reuptake (arrow) compared with other RA sites. The RA sites 4 to 5, for example, showed no LDCAE and a slower Cai reuptake. The baseline 90% Cai relaxation time was 279±70, 300±83, and 325±67 ms at superior, inferior SAN, and RA, respectively (P=0.11). After isoproterenol infusion, the 90% Cai relaxation time was shorter at superior SAN (124±34 ms) than at inferior SAN (138±24 ms; P=0.01) and at other RA sites (164±33 ms; P=0.001; Figure 6B). The superior and inferior SAN were harvested and analyzed for total expression of SERCA2a and phospholamban after optical mapping studies. As shown in the immunoblot in Figure 6C, SERCA2a and phospholamban were present in both SAN and RA. The SERCA2a/phospholamban ratio of RA (1.81±0.19) was higher than that of superior SAN (1.39±0.16; P=0.006) and inferior SAN (1.51±0.15; P=0.03; Figure 6D).


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Figure 6. The differences of Cai physiology between SAN and RA. A, a, Cai tracing from superior (1), middle (2), and inferior (3) SAN and from anterior (4) and posterior RA (5). b, The Cai tracing during baseline (left panels) and isoproterenol infusion of 1 µmol/L (right panels). The earliest activation sites were inferior (3) and superior SAN (1) during baseline and isoproterenol infusion, respectively. Arrow points to a rapid reduction of Cai at the superior SAN, which was followed by rapid onset of LDCAE (asterisk). B, The comparison of 90% Cai relaxation time among superior SAN, inferior SAN, and RA during baseline and isoproterenol infusion. C, The Western analyses of SERCA2a (SER) and phospholamban (PLB) at superior SAN (SN-S), inferior SAN (SN-I), and RA. D, The SERCA2a/phospholamban ratio of all preparations analyzed.

Importance of SR Function on Pacemaking
Caffeine sensitizes the ryanodine receptor 2 to activation, resulting in increased SR Ca2+ release.10 High concentrations of caffeine will deplete the SR calcium store. Indeed, when a 2-mL caffeine bolus (20 mmol/L) was injected directly into the right coronary artery, LDCAE appeared in the superior SAN, and the sinus rate increased by 84% in 2 hearts (online-only Data Supplement Figure IVA). However, after 10-minute continuous infusion, heart rate decreased, and LDCAE was abolished. Further isoproterenol infusion did not produce LDCAE (n=1). Continuous caffeine infusion at 0.2 and 0.5 mmol/L did not produce LDCAE (n=2; online-only Data Supplement Figure V).

If the appearance of LDCAE faithfully tracks stimulation of the Ca2+ clock, then agents that interfere with SR Ca2+ cycling should suppress LDCAE. Figure 7A shows the dose-response curve for ryanodine on SAN pacemaking rate (n=3). Because the activation rate changes rapidly during the procedure, it was not possible to document the origin of the atrial activation of every beat. Therefore, we have analyzed the heart rate, rather than sinus rate, on the basis of pseudo-ECG recordings. Low doses of ryanodine (<0.3 µmol/L), which sensitize ryanodine receptors to Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release, resulted in a slight (<10%) increase in heart rate. Higher doses of ryanodine, which block ryanodine receptors, caused a dose-dependent suppression of sinus node activity. The isoproterenol dose-dependent increase of heart rate was suppressed by ryanodine infusion (Figure 7B). Concomitant with these effects on heart rate, ryanodine pretreatment completely prevented isoproterenol-induced LDCAE (n=3; middle panel of Figure 7C). Isoproterenol-induced LDCAE was also abolished with ryanodine (n=2; online-only Data Supplement Figure IVB).


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Figure 7. The effect of ryanodine and ZD 7288 on intact canine SAN. A, Dose-dependent decrease of heart rate with ryanodine infusion. B, The impaired isoproterenol dose-dependent increase of heart rate by ryanodine infusion of 3 µmol/L. C, The Cai and Vm tracings during 3 µmol/L ryanodine alone infusion (left panels), concomitant 3 µmol/L ryanodine and 1 µmol/L isoproterenol infusion (middle panels), and 10 µmol/L ryanodine, 200 nmol/L thapsigargin, and 1 µmol/L isoproterenol infusion (right panels). D, The Cai and Vm tracings during 3 µmol/L ZD 7288 infusion (left panels). Isoproterenol infusion of 1 µmol/L produced LDCAE (arrows) at the superior SAN in the presence of ZD 7288 (right panels). The Cai and Vm tracings were recorded from superior (1), middle (2), and inferior (3) SANs. Ryd indicates ryanodine; Thap, thapsigargin.

To fully suppress SR Ca2+ cycling, we also studied the effects of ryanodine (10 µmol/L) in combination with thapsigargin (200 nmol/L). After 30-minute pretreatment, the mean heart rate decreased by 54% from 94±4 to 44±7 bpm. Subsequent isoproterenol infusion (1 µmol/L) increased the mean maximum heart rate to 112±13 bpm (18% over the baseline rate before ryanodine and thapsigargin). The heart rate increase was not associated with LDCAE (n=2; right panel of Figure 7C).

In contrast to SR inhibitors, the If blocker ZD 7288 (3 µmol/L), which decreased the basal sinus rate by 8.3% (n=3), did not prevent isoproterenol from increasing sinus rate by 40%, accompanied by the appearance of LDCAE in the superior SAN (Figure 7D).

Together, these findings provide strong support that in intact SAN tissue, LDCAE faithfully reports Ca2+ clock activity, as previously documented in isolated SAN myocytes.4–10

Effects of SR Inhibition and If Blockade on Sinus Rate and its Acceleration by Isoproterenol
If the voltage and Cai clocks act interdependently and synergistically to support each other in determining SAN rate, then the effects of blocking one clock or the other are likely to be complex and not necessarily very informative. This was the case, as shown in Figure 8, which summarizes the relative changes in heart rate caused by various pharmacological agents under basal conditions and during isoproterenol. Moreover, ryanodine and ryanodine plus thapsigargin often shifted the pacemaking site to outside of the SAN so that the source of activation was ectopic beats from outside of the mapped region. Therefore, the heart rate changes might underestimate the sinus node suppression by SR inhibition and overestimate the sinus node responses to isoproterenol. The exact magnitude of SAN suppression could not be determined because of the presence of competing ectopic rhythm.


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Figure 8. Spontaneous heart rate of canine intact SAN depends on both Ca2+-related mechanisms and If current. Bars show a change in heart rate (percent from baseline) induced by different pharmacological interventions. The gray bars show the changes during 3 µmol/L ZD 7288, 3 µmol/L ryanodine, and 10 µmol/L ryanodine plus 200 nmol/L thapsigargin infusion without isoproterenol, and the black bars show the changes during 1 µmol/L isoproterenol infusion.


*    Discussion
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*Discussion
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Major Findings
The present study supports the importance of spontaneous SR Ca2+ release and the Ca2+ clock to pacemaking in the intact canine SAN. Key findings include the demonstration of a robust LDCAE and its correlation with sinus rate acceleration during β-adrenergic stimulation, the demonstration of LDCAE during caffeine-induced sinus rate acceleration, and the concomitant suppression of isoproterenol-induced LDCAE and sinus rate acceleration by ryanodine and thapsigargin. In addition, sinus rate acceleration during isoproterenol infusion was partially (but not completely) blocked by ZD 7288, a specific If current inhibitor. These findings have reproduced several key observations used to support the Ca2+ clock hypothesis in isolated SAN myocytes and in intact dogs.4–11 In addition, we have demonstrated that isoproterenol infusion resulted in a superior shift of pacemaking site within the SAN, such that the leading pacemaking site always colocalized with the site with the most robust LDCAE. Together, these findings support the conclusion that spontaneous SR Ca2+ release acts synergistically with activation of membrane ionic currents such as If to accelerate the sinus rate in intact canine SAN during β-adrenergic stimulation.

Heterogeneous Cai Dynamics in the SAN
Cells in different portions of the SAN exhibit a range of electrophysiological and Ca2+ handling characteristics.18–21 Mapping intact RA to study SAN function has the advantage that differential responses to β-adrenergic stimulation and other interventions can be characterized regionally within the SAN and compared with RA. LDCAE was observed in only a small percentage of the preparations at baseline. One possible explanation of the latter finding is that the Ca2+ clock lagged behind the voltage clock in regulating DD under basal conditions. Alternatively, because each pixel in an optical map contains information from multiple cells, the effects of spatial averaging might have prevented us from documenting smaller spontaneous SR Ca2+ releases or Ca2+ releases from individual SAN cells. The importance of SR Ca2+ release on baseline heart rate is also supported by the finding that the impact of ryanodine and ryanodine plus thapsigargin on heart rate is much greater than the blockage of If current alone. However, LDCAE occurred in all preparations during isoproterenol infusion, associated with a superior shift of the leading pacemaker site. The superior shift of LDCAE and the pacemaking site was also observed consistently with caffeine infusion. Most importantly, the site of maximum LDCAE slope always colocalized with the leading pacemaking site, suggesting a shift in which the voltage clock now lagged the Ca2+ clock. This observation indicates a strong association between LDCAE and pacemaking during β-adrenergic stimulation and provides new insights into pacemaker hierarchy in the canine RA.12,13

Mechanisms of DD
Multiple time- and voltage-dependent ionic currents have been identified in cardiac pacemaker cells that contribute to DD, including ICa-L, ICa-T, IST, and various types of delayed rectifier K currents.22 Many of these membrane currents are known to respond to β-adrenergic stimulation. Some of these currents, such as ICa-L, also promote LDCAE and the acceleration of sinus rate by the Ca2+ clock as well as the voltage clock. The interdependence and synergy between the 2 clocks is evident from the pharmacological responses (Figure 8). If the 2 clocks were independent, with the faster clock driving the heart rate under a given condition, then blocking the slower clock should have no effect on SAN rate, whereas blocking the faster clock should decrease the SAN rate to that of the slower clock (which could be either markedly or only slightly slower than the faster clock). However, because both SR inhibitors and If blockade slowed sinus rate under basal conditions, as well as blunted the isoproterenol-induced increase in sinus rate, the hypothesis of independent clocks can be excluded. This is not surprising given that common ionic mechanisms, such as ICa-L, are known to regulate both clocks. However, because the 2 clocks are interdependent, the relative potency of SR inhibition versus If blockade on slowing sinus rate in Figure 8 becomes very difficult to interpret because interdependency implies that inhibiting the SR will affect the voltage clock as well as the Ca2+ clock, and vice versa. The interpretation is further complicated by the presence of ectopic foci outside the mapped region during sinus node suppression. Thus, the presence or absence of LDCAE appears to be the most reliable indicator of which clock is predominantly driving the sinus rate under any given condition.

Cai Sinkhole and the Mechanisms of Pacemaking
Hwang et al15 previously reported that a Cai sinkhole in the postshock period is the site for the first postshock activation that reinitiates ventricular fibrillation. In the present study, we found that a Cai sinkhole is also present at the site of the earliest LDCAE and subsequent onset of the sinus activation. The formation of the Cai sinkhole was facilitated by a rapid decline (short relaxation time) of Cai fluorescence at the superior SAN during isoproterenol infusion. This finding suggests that Cai reuptake by SR is the fastest in the superior SAN. Because the uptake at superior SAN was the fastest, it resulted in a low Cai region surrounded by high Cai region and the formation of Cai sinkhole during early diastole (Figure 3D). More rapid and complete SR Ca2+ reuptake may ensure that the same site is the earliest to spontaneously release Ca2+ in the next cycle.

Differential SERCA2a/Phospholamban Ratio at SAN and RA
The key protein regulator of Ca uptake is phospholamban, which inhibits SERCA2a in its dephosphorylated state. β-Adrenergic stimulation phosphorylates phospholamban, reversing its inhibition of SERCA2a and increasing Ca2+ uptake. In canine hearts, the SERCA2a/phospholamban molar ratio is estimated at {approx}1:2, implying that at most only half of SERCA2a is inhibited by phospholamban in the basal state.23,24 We demonstrated in the present study that there was a significantly lower SERCA2a/phospholamban ratio at SAN sites than at RA sites, suggesting that more phospholamban molecules are available to regulate SERCA2a molecules in SAN than in RA. Isoproterenol infusion phosphorylates phospholamban and relieves phospholamban inhibition of SERCA2a, which may account for more robust Ca uptake in SAN than in RA during isoproterenol infusion. However, we did not directly measure the phosphorylation state of phospholamban before and after isoproterenol infusion to confirm this hypothesis.

Study Limitations
An important concern in applying dual optical mapping of Vm and Cai to a thin, slowly conducting tissue such as the intact SAN is whether the different dyes are imaging equivalent volumes of tissue because the dyes have different tissue penetration and scattering properties.25 Because conduction velocity is very slow, this factor could distort the timing of the Ca2+ transient relative to the voltage transient if the respective fluorescence signals were being recorded from nonidentical tissue layers. However, this concern is somewhat mitigated by the finding that the same sites that did not exhibit LDCAE under basal conditions developed LDCAE after isoproterenol, despite identical imaging parameters. Although motion artifact after isoproterenol infusion could potentially create an artifact, as shown in online-only Data Supplement Figure I, we documented that motion artifact was negligible in this study. We did not directly measure the SR Ca2+ release. It is therefore possible that some components of LDCAE might have originated from the membrane Ca2+ currents. However, LDCAE was completely suppressed by drugs that inhibited SR function. Finally, pharmacological agents such as ryanodine, thapsigargin, and ZD 7288 are not completely selective, and nonspecific effects cannot be excluded.


*    Acknowledgments
 
We thank Lei Lin, Jian Tan, Juan Song, and Stephanie Plummer for their assistance.

Sources of Funding

This study was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grants P01 HL78931, R01 HL78932, and 71140; a Korean Ministry of Information and Communication and Institute for Information Technology Advancement Through Research and Develop Support project (Dr Joung); a Nihon Kohden/St Jude Medical electrophysiology fellowship (Dr Maruyama); Piansky Family Endowment (Dr Fishbein); Medtronic-Zipes endowments (Dr Chen); and an American Heart Association Established Investigator Award (Dr Lin).

Disclosures

None.


*    References
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*References
 
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CLINICAL PERSPECTIVE

For many years we were taught that membrane ionic currents, such as If, are responsible for sinus node automaticity. The rhythmic membrane depolarization (membrane ionic clock) then initiates sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium release and cardiac contraction. In that scenario, the SR Ca release is responsible only for the mechanical function of the heart. However, the findings in the present study and in several previous studies indicate that rhythmic and spontaneous (non-voltage-gated) SR Ca release (Ca clock) is also important in sinoatrial node automaticity and is largely responsible for sinus rate acceleration during sympathetic stimulation. The Ca and the membrane ionic clocks work synergistically to generate sinus rhythm. Because healthy SR Ca handling is important in the initiation of the heartbeats, disease conditions associated with abnormal SR Ca handling and impaired intracellular Ca dynamics may be associated with sinoatrial node dysfunction. Clinical examples may include heart failure, chronic atrial fibrillation, and genetic mutations of the type 2 ryanodine receptor. The latter disease is associated with both catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia and sinus bradycardia. Abnormally low SR Ca release threshold and chronic SR Ca depletion may be responsible for both tachycardic and bradycardic components of disease. Recently, animal experiments suggest that inhibition of spontaneous SR Ca release is effective in arrhythmia control. Data from the present study suggest that clinical trials of these therapeutic strategies should consider sinus node dysfunction, such as bradycardia and chronotropic incompetence, as possible complications.


*    Footnotes
 
The online-only Data Supplement is available with this article at http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.817379/DC1.





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