Optogenetic confirmation of transverse‐tubular membrane excitability in intact cardiac myocytes

Author:

Scardigli Marina1,Pásek Michal23,Santini Lorenzo4,Palandri Chiara4,Conti Emilia56,Crocini Claudia78,Campione Marina9,Loew Leslie M.10ORCID,de Vries Antoine A. F.11,Pijnappels Daniël A.11,Pavone Francesco S.5,Poggesi Corrado1,Cerbai Elisabetta45,Coppini Raffaele4,Kohl Peter12ORCID,Ferrantini Cecilia1,Sacconi Leonardo51213ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine University of Florence Florence Italy

2. Institute of Thermomechanics Czech Academy of Science Prague Czech Republic

3. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

4. Department of Neurology, Psychology, Drug Sciences and Child Health University of Florence Florence Italy

5. European Laboratory for Non‐Linear Spectroscopy – LENS Sesto Fiorentino Italy

6. Neuroscience Institute National Research Council Pisa Italy

7. DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research) Partner Site Berlin Berlin Germany

8. Max Rubner Center for Cardiovascular Metabolic Renal Research (MRC), Deutsches Herzzentrum der Charité (DHZC) Charité‐Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

9. Institute of Neuroscience (IN‐CNR) and Department of Biomedical Science, University of Padua Padua Italy

10. Center for Cell Analysis and Modeling University of Connecticut Farmington CT USA

11. Laboratory of Experimental Cardiology, Department of Cardiology Leiden University Medical Center Leiden The Netherlands

12. Institute for Experimental Cardiovascular Medicine, University Heart Center and Medical Faculty University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

13. Institute of Clinical Physiology National Research Council (IFC‐CNR) Florence Italy

Abstract

AbstractT‐tubules (TT) form a complex network of sarcolemmal membrane invaginations, essential for well‐co‐ordinated excitation–contraction coupling (ECC) and thus homogeneous mechanical activation of cardiomyocytes. ECC is initiated by rapid depolarization of the sarcolemmal membrane. Whether TT membrane depolarization is active (local generation of action potentials; AP) or passive (following depolarization of the outer cell surface sarcolemma; SS) has not been experimentally validated in cardiomyocytes. Based on the assessment of ion flux pathways needed for AP generation, we hypothesize that TT are excitable. We therefore explored TT excitability experimentally, using an all‐optical approach to stimulate and record trans‐membrane potential changes in TT that were structurally disconnected, and hence electrically insulated, from the SS membrane by transient osmotic shock. Our results establish that cardiomyocyte TT can generate AP. These AP show electrical features that differ substantially from those observed in SS, consistent with differences in the density of ion channels and transporters in the two different membrane domains. We propose that TT‐generated AP represent a safety mechanism for TT AP propagation and ECC, which may be particularly relevant in pathophysiological settings where morpho‐functional changes reduce the electrical connectivity between SS and TT membranes. imageKey points Cardiomyocytes are characterized by a complex network of membrane invaginations (the T‐tubular system) that propagate action potentials to the core of the cell, causing uniform excitation–contraction coupling across the cell. In the present study, we investigated whether the T‐tubular system is able to generate action potentials autonomously, rather than following depolarization of the outer cell surface sarcolemma. For this purpose, we developed a fully optical platform to probe and manipulate the electrical dynamics of subcellular membrane domains. Our findings demonstrate that T‐tubules are intrinsically excitable, revealing distinct characteristics of self‐generated T‐tubular action potentials. This active electrical capability would protect cells from voltage drops potentially occurring within the T‐tubular network.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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