EC-Coupling - Ca regulation Flashcards

1
Q

SERCA Subtypes

A

SERCA2a = slow twitch and heart

SERCA1 = fast twitch skeletal

SERCA2b/3a = non-muscle

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2
Q

Function of SERCA

Ca CG

A
  • Returns Ca from cytoplasm to SR in diastole
  • Most important ‘extruder’ because most Ca must be returned to the SR
  • ATPase that works against the GC of Ca
  • [Ca]i = 1 mM
  • [Ca]sr = 200 mM
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3
Q

Role of SERCA in HF

A
  • Severely reduced SERCA current in HF

* (CUPID 2 2015) gene therapy, terminated early with -ve results

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4
Q

SERCA mechanism

A
  • ATP binds to SERCA
  • Dissociates to ADP.Pi
  • Conformational change in SERCA
  • Ca shuttled into SR in the process
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5
Q

SERCA regulation

A
  • Phospholamban (PL) binds SERCA to inhibit it
  • PL = homopentamer
  • PKA phosphorylates PL to relieve this inhibition
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6
Q

RyR Structure

A
  • GIANT (1.2 MD)
  • Four units form one large large pore region in the centre
  • Gathered in ‘clusters’ (2-50) served by (1-2) dedicated L-Types Ca Channels of the t-tubules
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7
Q

RyR Function (Cause and effect)

A
  • Extremely high [Ca] in cleft* activates RyR
  • RyR initiate high-conductance release of SR Ca
  • CICR enables contraction
  • Ca is both the trigger, and the result, yet signal is somehow graded, not regenerative
  • Cleft = t-tubule-SR interface
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8
Q

Modulation of Force in muscle types

A

Skeletal Muscle

  • CNS Recruits/dismisses motor units to modulate force

Cardiac Muscle

  • RyR vary force at the level of the sarcomere
  • Graded response to amount of Ca trigger
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9
Q

RyR CICR

A
  • SR-released Ca triggers contraction (if [Ca]SR is sufficient)
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10
Q

SL Ca-ATPase

A
  • Plays little role in beat-to-beat [Ca]

- May be important in long term control of [Ca]

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11
Q

Mitochondria and Ca

A
  • Import Ca through uniporter
  • Very sensitive to [Ca]
  • [Ca] regulates energy production
  • Uses NCX to extrude Ca
  • NHX to maintain [Na]grad
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12
Q

Why Store Ca inside the cell

A
  • To produce contraction/relaxation without an SR would need giant influx/efflux of Ca across the membrane
  • This would cause massive Em fluctuation
  • Unstable Em can destabilise the CM and the heart
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13
Q

Clinical Significance of Unregulated Ca

A
  • Cells with poor Ca control may beat spontaneously
  • Can set up foci for arrhythmia
  • SERCA in HF, arrhythmias
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14
Q

CICR

  • Muscle types
  • Connections
  • Regulation
A
  • Occurs to some extent in all forms of muscle (most exaggerated in cardiac)
  • Direct L-Type-RyR communication in skeletal
  • Close co-localisation in cardiac
  • Influx is voltage-dependent
  • RyR-release is influx-dependent
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