Title of article :
Immunogold-labeled L-type Calcium Channels are Clustered in the Surface Plasma Membrane Overlying Junctional Sarcoplasmic Reticulum in Guinea-pig Myocytes—Implications for Excitation–contraction Coupling in Cardiac Muscle
Author/Authors :
David V. Gathercole، نويسنده , , David J. Colling، نويسنده , , Jeremy N. Skepper، نويسنده , , Yoshiko Takagishi، نويسنده , , Allan J. Levi، نويسنده , , Nicholas J. Severs، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Ca2+release through ryanodine receptors, located in the membrane of the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), initiates contraction of cardiac muscle. Ca2+influx through plasma membrane L-type Ca2+channels is thought to be an important trigger for opening ryanodine receptors (««Ca2+-induced Ca2+-release»»). Optimal transmission of the transmembrane Ca2+influx signal to SR release is predicted to involve spatial juxtaposition of L-type Ca2+channels to the ryanodine receptors of the junctional SR. Although such spatial coupling has often been implicitly assumed, and data from immunofluorescence microscopy are consistent with its existence, the definitive demonstration of such a structural organization in mammalian tissue is lacking at the electron-microscopic level. To determine the spatial distribution of plasma membrane L-type Ca2+channels and their location in relation to underlying junctional SR, we applied two high-resolution immunogold-labeling techniques, label-fracture and cryothin-sectioning, combined with quantitative analysis, to guinea-pig ventricular myocytes. Label-fracture enabled visualization of colloidal gold-labeled L-type Ca2+channels in planar freeze-fracture electron-microscopic views of the plasma membrane. Mathematical analysis of the gold label distribution (by nearest-neighbor distance distribution and the radial distribution function) demonstrated genuine clustering of the labeled channels. Gold-labeled cryosections showed that labeled L-type Ca2+channels quantitatively predominated in domains of the plasma membrane overlying junctional SR. These findings provide an ultrastructural basis for functional coupling between L-type Ca2+channels and junctional SR and for excitation–contraction coupling in guinea-pig cardiac muscle.
Keywords :
electron microscopy , Label-fracture , Mathematical analysis , Excitation–contraction coupling. , L-type calcium channels , Plasma membrane structure
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology