Regional differences in the negative inotropic effect of acetylcholine within the canine ventricle.

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RESUMO

1. Regional differences in the effects of ACh on sub-epicardial, mid-wall and sub-endocardial cells of the dog left ventricle have been studied. 2. ACh produced a dose-dependent, atropine-sensitive negative inotropic effect that was greatest in sub-epicardial cells and small or absent in sub-endocardial cells. 3. In sub-epicardial (but not sub-endocardial) cells, ACh also resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in action potential duration. The inotropic effect of ACh on sub-epicardial cells was primarily the result of the decrease of action potential duration, because during trains of voltage clamp pulses the inotropic effect of ACh was reduced or abolished. At a holding potential of -80 mV, 10(-5)M ACh decreased L-type Ca2+ current by approximately 8% and this is thought to be responsible for the small inotropic effect during trains of pulses. 4. Although 4-AP, a blocker of the transient outward current (I(to)), abolished the "spike and dome' morphology of the sub-epicardial action potential, it had little or no effect on the actions of ACh on sub-epicardial cells. ACh had no effect on I(to) in sub-epicardial cells in voltage clamp experiments. 5. ACh activated a Ba(2+)-sensitive outward current (IK,ACh) in sub-epicardial cells, but little or no such current in sub-endocardial cells. In sub-epicardial cells, ACh also inhibited the inward rectifier current, IK,1. 6. It is concluded that in left ventricular sub-epicardial cells, ACh activates IK,ACh. This results in a shortening of the action potential and, therefore, a negative inotropic effect. In subendocardial cells, ACh activates little or no IK,ACh and, therefore, it has little or no negative inotropic effect. This may result from a regional variation in the expression of the muscarinic K+ channel.

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