Contractile response of individual cardiac myocytes to norepinephrine declines with senescence

Sakai, M.; Danziger, R.S.; Xiao, R.P.; Spurgeon, H.A.; Lakatta, E.G.

American Journal of Physiology 262(1 Pt 2): H184-H189

1992


ISSN/ISBN: 0002-9513
PMID: 1370751
Document Number: 390112
The present study utilized individual isolated left ventricular cardiac myocytes from hearts of animals of a broad age range to evaluate the response to norepinephrine and to other stimuli that augment myocardial cell contractile performance. During electrical stimulation before drugs neither the amplitude nor the velocity of shortening normalized for resting cell length differed among cells isolated from 2-, 6- to 8-, or 24-mo-old animals. Norepinephrine augmented twitch amplitude and velocity about fourfold in cells from 2-mo-old hearts but only by 2.5-fold in cells from 24-month-old hearts (age effect, P < 0.001). In contrast, the contractile response to increases in bathing [Ca2+] or to the addition of the calcium channel agonist BAY K 8644 or of 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (CPT cAMP) did not vary with age. These results indicate that the age-associated contractile deficit during .beta.-adrenergic stimulation is specific to the .beta.-adrenergic pathway and an age-associated deficit in the net production of cAMP. This can be attributed to a diminished cardiac myocyte response to .beta.-adrenergic agonists, in contrast to modulation of the .beta.-adrenergic response by other receptor agonists, which are present in intact tissue but absent under the conditions of the present study.

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