Simultaneous measurement of Ca2+, contraction, and potential in cardiac myocytes

HA Spurgeon, MD Stern, G Baartz… - American Journal …, 1990 - journals.physiology.org
HA Spurgeon, MD Stern, G Baartz, S Raffaeli, RG Hansford, A Talo, EG Lakatta…
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1990journals.physiology.org
A system is described that can simultaneously record cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]
i), cell length, and either membrane potential or current in single cardiac myocytes loaded
with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator indo-1. Fluorescence is excited by epi-illumination with
3.8-microsecond flashes of 350+/-5 nm light from a xenon arc. Indo-1 fluoresence is
measured simultaneously in spectral windows of 391-434 nm and 457-507 nm, and the ratio
of indo-1 emission in the two bands is computed as a measure of [Ca2+] i for each flash …
A system is described that can simultaneously record cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), cell length, and either membrane potential or current in single cardiac myocytes loaded with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator indo-1. Fluorescence is excited by epi-illumination with 3.8-microsecond flashes of 350 +/- 5 nm light from a xenon arc. Indo-1 fluoresence is measured simultaneously in spectral windows of 391-434 nm and 457-507 nm, and the ratio of indo-1 emission in the two bands is computed as a measure of [Ca2+]i for each flash. With cells loaded with the permeant acetoxymethyl ester of indo-1, quantitation of [Ca2+]i is not precise, owing to subcellular compartmentation of indo-1; however, the instrument would allow full quantitation if indo-1 free acid was introduced by microinjection. Simultaneously, cell length is measured on-line from the bright-field image of the cell. Because fluorescence collection is time gated during the brief flash, and red light (650-750 nm) is used for the bright-field image, cell length and [Ca2+]i measurements are obtained simultaneously without cross talk. Membrane potential or current can be recorded simultaneously with indo-1 fluorescence and cell length via standard patch-clamping techniques.
American Physiological Society