1. We used electrophysiological and electron spin resonance (e.s.r.) techniques to study the mechanism of the protective effect of darodipine on rat isolated cardiomyocytes exposed to an exogenous source of oxygen free radicals (OFR). 2. The L-type calcium current (I(Ca,L)), action potential and cell shortening were measured in patch-clamped cells in the whole-cell configuration. I(Ca,L) blockade by darodipine was concentration-dependent, peak current being reduced by 20% with 50 nM and by 58% with 100 nM darodipine. The lowest concentration of darodipine did not affect action potential or twitch profile. 3. Exposure to OFR-generating solution (5 mM dihydroxyfumarate, DHF) caused the appearance of electrophysiological alterations and/or spontaneous activity in 73% of cells (n=26) within 5 min; action potential duration (APD) was prolonged (195+/-16 ms vs 140+/-6 ms in the control) and maximum diastolic potential (MDP) was reduced (-59.5+/-2.6 mV vs -69.8+/-0.8 mV in the control) (P<0.05, n=25). 4. A 2 min pretreatment with 50 nM darodipine significantly reduced the incidence of these arrhythmogenic events following a 5 min exposure to OFR (36% of cells, n=14; P<0.05 vs nonpretreated cells). Pretreatment with darodipine also prevented APD prolongation caused by OFR (137+/-12 ms after DHF vs 117+/-6 ms before DHF n=14, not significant) but not the decrease of MDP (-63.4+/-2.5 mV after DHF vs -70.9+/-1.0 mV before DHF, P<0.05). 5. The e.s.r. spectra obtained from the DHF-DMPO solution in the absence of darodipine demonstrated the presence of two components corresponding to two DMPO adducts. The addition of darodipine (50-500 nM) led to a concentration-dependent decrease in intensity of the signals, the intensity of the DMPO-COO.- adduct being decreased more than that of the DMPO-OH. adduct. 6. Our results demonstrate that darodipine dose-depentently blocks I(Ca,L) in rat isolated cardiomyocytes. Furthermore it exerts protective effects against free-radical-induced electrophysiological alterations independently of its calcium antagonistic properties; this effect is possibly due to trapping of specific radical species.

Protective effect of darodipine, a calcium antagonist, on rat cardiomyocytes against oxygen radical-mediated injury

BARBIERI, Mario;
1997

Abstract

1. We used electrophysiological and electron spin resonance (e.s.r.) techniques to study the mechanism of the protective effect of darodipine on rat isolated cardiomyocytes exposed to an exogenous source of oxygen free radicals (OFR). 2. The L-type calcium current (I(Ca,L)), action potential and cell shortening were measured in patch-clamped cells in the whole-cell configuration. I(Ca,L) blockade by darodipine was concentration-dependent, peak current being reduced by 20% with 50 nM and by 58% with 100 nM darodipine. The lowest concentration of darodipine did not affect action potential or twitch profile. 3. Exposure to OFR-generating solution (5 mM dihydroxyfumarate, DHF) caused the appearance of electrophysiological alterations and/or spontaneous activity in 73% of cells (n=26) within 5 min; action potential duration (APD) was prolonged (195+/-16 ms vs 140+/-6 ms in the control) and maximum diastolic potential (MDP) was reduced (-59.5+/-2.6 mV vs -69.8+/-0.8 mV in the control) (P<0.05, n=25). 4. A 2 min pretreatment with 50 nM darodipine significantly reduced the incidence of these arrhythmogenic events following a 5 min exposure to OFR (36% of cells, n=14; P<0.05 vs nonpretreated cells). Pretreatment with darodipine also prevented APD prolongation caused by OFR (137+/-12 ms after DHF vs 117+/-6 ms before DHF n=14, not significant) but not the decrease of MDP (-63.4+/-2.5 mV after DHF vs -70.9+/-1.0 mV before DHF, P<0.05). 5. The e.s.r. spectra obtained from the DHF-DMPO solution in the absence of darodipine demonstrated the presence of two components corresponding to two DMPO adducts. The addition of darodipine (50-500 nM) led to a concentration-dependent decrease in intensity of the signals, the intensity of the DMPO-COO.- adduct being decreased more than that of the DMPO-OH. adduct. 6. Our results demonstrate that darodipine dose-depentently blocks I(Ca,L) in rat isolated cardiomyocytes. Furthermore it exerts protective effects against free-radical-induced electrophysiological alterations independently of its calcium antagonistic properties; this effect is possibly due to trapping of specific radical species.
1997
Matucci, R; Ottaviani, Mf; Barbieri, Mario; Cerbai, E; Mugelli, A.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/1696111
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 12
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 10
social impact