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Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair

Skeletal myoblasts form grafts of mature muscle in injured hearts, and these grafts contract when exogenously stimulated. It is not known, however, whether cardiac muscle can form electromechanical junctions with skeletal muscle and induce its synchronous contraction. Here, we report that undifferen...

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Autores principales: Reinecke, Hans, MacDonald, Glen H., Hauschka, Stephen D., Murry, Charles E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2174851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10791985
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author Reinecke, Hans
MacDonald, Glen H.
Hauschka, Stephen D.
Murry, Charles E.
author_facet Reinecke, Hans
MacDonald, Glen H.
Hauschka, Stephen D.
Murry, Charles E.
author_sort Reinecke, Hans
collection PubMed
description Skeletal myoblasts form grafts of mature muscle in injured hearts, and these grafts contract when exogenously stimulated. It is not known, however, whether cardiac muscle can form electromechanical junctions with skeletal muscle and induce its synchronous contraction. Here, we report that undifferentiated rat skeletal myoblasts expressed N-cadherin and connexin43, major adhesion and gap junction proteins of the intercalated disk, yet both proteins were markedly downregulated after differentiation into myo-tubes. Similarly, differentiated skeletal muscle grafts in injured hearts had no detectable N-cadherin or connexin43; hence, electromechanical coupling did not occur after in vivo grafting. In contrast, when neonatal or adult cardiomyocytes were cocultured with skeletal muscle, ∼10% of the skeletal myotubes contracted in synchrony with adjacent cardiomyocytes. Isoproterenol increased myotube contraction rates by 25% in coculture without affecting myotubes in monoculture, indicating the cardiomyocytes were the pacemakers. The gap junction inhibitor heptanol aborted myotube contractions but left spontaneous contractions of individual cardiomyocytes intact, suggesting myotubes were activated via gap junctions. Confocal microscopy revealed the expression of cadherin and connexin43 at junctions between myotubes and neonatal or adult cardiomyocytes in vitro. After microinjection, myotubes transferred dye to neonatal cardiomyocytes via gap junctions. Calcium imaging revealed synchronous calcium transients in cardiomyocytes and myotubes. Thus, cardiomyocytes can form electromechanical junctions with some skeletal myotubes in coculture and induce their synchronous contraction via gap junctions. Although the mechanism remains to be determined, if similar junctions could be induced in vivo, they might be sufficient to make skeletal muscle grafts beat synchronously with host myocardium.
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spelling pubmed-21748512008-05-01 Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair Reinecke, Hans MacDonald, Glen H. Hauschka, Stephen D. Murry, Charles E. J Cell Biol Original Article Skeletal myoblasts form grafts of mature muscle in injured hearts, and these grafts contract when exogenously stimulated. It is not known, however, whether cardiac muscle can form electromechanical junctions with skeletal muscle and induce its synchronous contraction. Here, we report that undifferentiated rat skeletal myoblasts expressed N-cadherin and connexin43, major adhesion and gap junction proteins of the intercalated disk, yet both proteins were markedly downregulated after differentiation into myo-tubes. Similarly, differentiated skeletal muscle grafts in injured hearts had no detectable N-cadherin or connexin43; hence, electromechanical coupling did not occur after in vivo grafting. In contrast, when neonatal or adult cardiomyocytes were cocultured with skeletal muscle, ∼10% of the skeletal myotubes contracted in synchrony with adjacent cardiomyocytes. Isoproterenol increased myotube contraction rates by 25% in coculture without affecting myotubes in monoculture, indicating the cardiomyocytes were the pacemakers. The gap junction inhibitor heptanol aborted myotube contractions but left spontaneous contractions of individual cardiomyocytes intact, suggesting myotubes were activated via gap junctions. Confocal microscopy revealed the expression of cadherin and connexin43 at junctions between myotubes and neonatal or adult cardiomyocytes in vitro. After microinjection, myotubes transferred dye to neonatal cardiomyocytes via gap junctions. Calcium imaging revealed synchronous calcium transients in cardiomyocytes and myotubes. Thus, cardiomyocytes can form electromechanical junctions with some skeletal myotubes in coculture and induce their synchronous contraction via gap junctions. Although the mechanism remains to be determined, if similar junctions could be induced in vivo, they might be sufficient to make skeletal muscle grafts beat synchronously with host myocardium. The Rockefeller University Press 2000-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2174851/ /pubmed/10791985 Text en © 2000 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Reinecke, Hans
MacDonald, Glen H.
Hauschka, Stephen D.
Murry, Charles E.
Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title_full Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title_fullStr Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title_full_unstemmed Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title_short Electromechanical Coupling between Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle: Implications for Infarct Repair
title_sort electromechanical coupling between skeletal and cardiac muscle: implications for infarct repair
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2174851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10791985
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