Effects of cyclopiazonic acid on rat myocardium: inhibition of calcium uptake into sarcoplasmic reticulum.

  1. S Takahashi,
  2. Y Kato,
  3. M Adachi,
  4. N Agata,
  5. H Tanaka and
  6. K Shigenobu
  1. Department of Pharmacology, Toho University School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chiba, Japan.

    Abstract

    The effects of cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), which is reported to inhibit Ca++ uptake into intracellular Ca++ store sites in skeletal and smooth muscles, were examined in ventricular myocardia of the adult rat. In isolated papillary muscle, 0.3 to 30 microM CPA concentration-dependently decreased the contractile force and prolonged the relaxation phase of twitch contractions. In skinned papillary muscle with functional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) preserved, application of CPA during the Ca++ loading period reduced the peak tension of subsequent caffeine-induced contractions. When CPA was applied during exposure to caffeine, it had no significant effect on the peak tension, but prolonged the decay of the caffeine-induced contraction. CPA had no substantial influence on the pCa-tension relationship of skinned fibers without functional SR. CPA had no substantial influence on the peak inward and steady-state membrane currents of isolated myocardial cells. These results suggest that CPA inhibits Ca uptake into SR by acting as a specific inhibitor of SR Ca(++)-ATPase in cardiac muscle as in skeletal and smooth muscles and thus provides a valuable pharmacological tool for studying myocardial excitation-contraction mechanisms.

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