pH recovery from a proton load in rat cardiomyocytes: effects of chronic exercise
The ability of cardiomyocytes to recover from a proton load was examined in the hearts of exercise-trained and sedentary control rats in CO /[Formula: see text]-free media. Acidosis was created by the NH Cl prepulse technique, and intracellular pH (pH ) was determined using fluorescence microscopy o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 2018-02, Vol.314 (2), p.H285-H292 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The ability of cardiomyocytes to recover from a proton load was examined in the hearts of exercise-trained and sedentary control rats in CO
/[Formula: see text]-free media. Acidosis was created by the NH
Cl prepulse technique, and intracellular pH (pH
) was determined using fluorescence microscopy on carboxy-SNARF-1 AM-loaded isolated cardiomyocytes. CO
-independent pH
buffering capacity (β
) was measured by incrementally reducing the extracellular NH
Cl concentration in steps of 50% from 20 to 1.25 mM. β
increased as pH
decreased in both exercise-trained and sedentary control groups. However, the magnitude of increase in β
as a function of pH
was found to be significantly ( P < 0.001) greater in the exercise-trained group compared with the sedentary control group. The rate of pH
recovery from an imposed proton load was found to not be different between the exercise-trained and control groups. The Na
/H
exchanger-dependent H
extrusion rate during the recovery from an imposed proton load, however, was found to be significantly greater in the exercise-trained group compared with the control group. By increasing β
and subsequently the Na
/H
exchanger-dependent H
extrusion rate, exercise training may provide cardiomyocytes with the ability to better handle an intracellular excess of H
generated during hypoxia/ischemic insults and may serve in a cardioprotective role. These data may be predictive of two positive outcomes: 1) increased exercise tolerance by the heart and 2) a protective mechanism that limits the degree of myocardial acidosis and subsequent damage that accompanies ischemia-reperfusion stress. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The enhanced ability to deal with acidosis conferred by exercise training is likely to improve exercise tolerance and outcomes in response to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. |
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ISSN: | 0363-6135 1522-1539 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpheart.00405.2017 |