975 resultados para CA2 -ACTIVATED K CHANNEL
Resumo:
Neurofilament proteins (NFs) are the major components of the intermediate filaments of the neuronal cytoskeleton. The three different NF proteins; the low (NF-L), medium (NF-M),and dendrites.NF proteins play an important role in neuronal development, and plasticity,and seem to contribute to the pathophysiology of several diseases. However, the detailed expression patterns of NF proteins in the course of postnatal aturation, and in response to seizures in the rat have remained unknown. In this work, I have studied the developmental expression and cellular distribution of the three NF proteins in the rat hippocampus during the postnatal development. The reactivity of NF proteins in response to kainic acid (KA)-induced status epilepticus (SE)was studied in the hippocampus of 9-day-old rats, and using in vitro organotypic hippocampal slices cultures prepared from P6-7 rats. The results showed that NF-L and NF-M proteins are expressed already at the postnatal day 1, while the expression of NF-H mainly occurred during the second postnatal week. The immunoreactivity of NF proteins varied depending on the cell type and sub-cellular location in the hippocampus. In adult rats, KA-induced SE typically results in severe and permanent NF degradation. However, in our P9 rats KA-induced SE resulted in a transient increase in the expression of NF proteins during the first few hours but not degradation. No neuronal death or mossy fiber sprouting was observed at any time after SE. The in vitro studies with OHCs, which mimick the in vivo developing models where a local injection of KA is applied(e.g. intrahippocampal), indicated that NF proteins were rapidly degraded in response to KA treatment, this effect being effectively inhibited by the treatment with the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX, and calpain inhibitor MDL-28170. These compounds also significantly ameliorated the KA-induced region-specific neuronal damage. The NMDA receptor antagonist and the L-type Ca2+ channel blocker did not have any significant effect. In conclusion, the results indicate that the developmental expression of NF in the rat hippocampus is differentially regulated and targeted in the different hippocampal cell types during the postnatal development. Furthermore, despite SE, the mechanisms leading to NF degradation and neuronal death are not activated in P9 rats unlike in adults. The reason for this remains unknown. The results in organotypic hippocampal cultures confirm the validity of this in vitro model to study development processes, and to perform pharmacological studies. The results also suggest that calpain proteases as interesting pharmacological targets to reduce neuronal damage after acute excitotoxic insults.
Resumo:
Store-operated Ca(2+) channels (SOCs) are voltage-independent Ca(2+) channels activated upon depletion of the endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) stores. Early studies suggest the contribution of such channels to Ca(2+) homeostasis in insulin-secreting pancreatic β-cells. However, their composition and contribution to glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) remains unclear. In this study, endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) depletion triggered by acetylcholine (ACh) or thapsigargin stimulated the formation of a ternary complex composed of Orai1, TRPC1, and STIM1, the key proteins involved in the formation of SOCs. Ca(2+) imaging further revealed that Orai1 and TRPC1 are required to form functional SOCs and that these channels are activated by STIM1 in response to thapsigargin or ACh. Pharmacological SOCs inhibition or dominant negative blockade of Orai1 or TRPC1 using the specific pore mutants Orai1-E106D and TRPC1-F562A impaired GSIS in rat β-cells and fully blocked the potentiating effect of ACh on secretion. In contrast, pharmacological or dominant negative blockade of TRPC3 had no effect on extracellular Ca(2+) entry and GSIS. Finally, we observed that prolonged exposure to supraphysiological glucose concentration impaired SOCs function without altering the expression levels of STIM1, Orai1, and TRPC1. We conclude that Orai1 and TRPC1, which form SOCs regulated by STIM1, play a key role in the effect of ACh on GSIS, a process that may be impaired in type 2 diabetes.
Resumo:
The CA1 region of the hippocampus is particularly vulnerable to ischemic damage. While NMDA receptors play a major role in excitotoxicity, it is thought to be exacerbated in this region by two forms of post-ischemic AMPA receptor (AMPAR) plasticity - namely, anoxic long-term potentiation (a-LTP), and a delayed increase in the prevalence of Ca2+ -permeable GluA2-lacking AMPARs (CP-AMPARs). The acid-sensing ion channel 1a (ASIC1a) which is expressed in CA1 pyramidal neurons, is also known to contribute to post-ischemic neuronal death and to physiologically induced LTP. This raises the question - does ASIC1a activation drive the post-ischemic forms of AMPAR plasticity in CA1 pyramidal neurons? We have tested this by examining organotypic hippocampal slice cultures (OHSCs) exposed to oxygen glucose deprivation (OGD), and dissociated cultures of hippocampal pyramidal neurons (HPN) exposed to low pH (acidosis). We find that both a-LTP and the delayed increase in the prevalence of CP-AMPARs are dependent on ASIC1a activation during ischemia. Indeed, acidosis alone is sufficient to induce the increase in CP-AMPARs. We also find that inhibition of ASIC1a channels circumvents any potential neuroprotective benefit arising from block of CP-AMPARs. By demonstrating that ASIC1a activation contributes to post-ischemic AMPAR plasticity, our results identify a functional interaction between acidotoxicity and excitotoxicity in hippocampal CA1 cells, and provide insight into the role of ASIC1a and CP-AMPARs as potential drug targets for neuroprotection. We thus propose that ASIC1a activation can drive certain forms of CP-AMPAR plasticity, and that inhibiting ASIC1a affords neuroprotection.
Resumo:
Perioperative management of patients treated with the non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants is an ongoing challenge. Due to the lack of good clinical studies involving adequate monitoring and reversal therapies, management requires knowledge and understanding of pharmacokinetics, renal function, drug interactions, and evaluation of the surgical bleeding risk. Consideration of the benefit of reversal of anticoagulation is important and, for some low risk bleeding procedures, it may be in the patient's interest to continue anticoagulation. In case of major intra-operative bleeding in patients likely to have therapeutic or supra-therapeutic levels of anticoagulation, specific reversal agents/antidotes would be of value but are currently lacking. As a consequence, a multimodal approach should be taken which includes the administration of 25 to 50 U/kg 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrates or 30 to 50 U/kg activated prothrombin complex concentrate (FEIBA®) in some life-threatening situations. Finally, further studies are needed to clarify the ideal therapeutic intervention.
Resumo:
Channel activating proteases (CAP) are membrane-bound serine proteases that have been identified as in vitro activators of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). Two of them are mainly studied in the laboratory. CAP1/Prss8 was previously shown implicated in colonic sodium homeostasis in vivo. In the first part of this thesis, we generated and characterized mice deficient for CAP2/Tmprss4. The mice are healthy and viable, and they do not show any obvious phenotype. We investigated ENaC activity and expression under regular and sodium- deficient diet, and we could demonstrate that CAP2 is not a major regulator of sodium homeostasis in vivo. We next studied whether CAP2 is implicated in potassium homeostasis. We detected a strong gender-dependency when CAP2 knock-out mice were put under a potassium-deficient diet. We showed in male mice an implication of CAP2 in the regulation of the colonic H+, K+- ATPase, and we propose an implication of membrane-associated progesterone receptors and their binding partners, as well as a possible cleavage-mediated glucocorticoid receptor signalling. We studied the possible interaction between CAPI and CAP2 by generating and characterizing two different mouse study groups, displaying different hypomorphic mutations in the CAPI gene, and deficient for CAP2. We demonstrate that balanced expression of CAPI and CAP2 is required for maintainance of skin integrity and for normal placental development. As CAPI knock-out embryos die due to a placental failure, the additional combined deletion of CAP2 resulted in survival until birth. We could evidence that CAPI and CAP2 are implicated in the same signalling pathway as proposed in cancer studies at the level of the placenta, implicating integrin a5, ERK, AKT, E- and N-cadherin. Furthermore, we investigated whether CAPI is implicated in the pathogenesis and susceptibility to experimental chronic colitis in a mutant rat model. By giving CAPI mutant rats Dextran sodium sulfate, we induced chronic inflammation of the colon, and we highlighted the protective role of CAPI at the histopathological and clinical levels. In conclusion, we showed that CAP2 is not a major regulator of ENaC-mediated sodium homeostasis in vivo, but rather a regulator of potassium homeostasis in a gender-dependent manner implicating the colonic H+, K+-ATPase, membrane progesterone receptors, and the glucocorticoid receptor. We have investigated whether CAPI and CAP2 interact at the functional level, and we show that a balanced expression of CAPI and CAP2 is required in the skin, but also in the placenta. Imbalanced expression of CAPI and CAP2 leads to impaired EMT-associated signalling. We have studied whether CAPI is implicated in the pathogenesis and susceptibility to chronic colitis, and we demonstrated the protective role of CAPI in distal colon. -- Les protéases activatrices de canal (CAP) sont des protéases à serine attachées à la membrane qui ont été identifiées comme activateurs in vitro du canal sodique épithélial (ENaC). Deux de ces protéases sont principalement étudiées dans le laboratoire. CAP1/Prss8 a été identifié préalablement comme impliqué dans l'homéostasie du sodium in vivo au niveau du côlon. Dans la première partie de cette thèse, nous avons généré et caractérisé des souris déficientes pour CAP2/Tmprss4. Les souris sont en bonne santé et viables, et elles ne présentent pas de phénotype visible. Nous avons étudié l'activité et l'expression d'ENaC sous diète normale et déficiente en sodium, et nous avons démontré que CAP2 n'est pas un régulateur essentiel de l'homéostasie sodique in vivo. Nous avons ensuite étudié si CAP2 est impliqué dans l'homéostasie du potassium. Nous avons détecté une forte dépendance du sexe lorsque les souris knock-out pour CAP2 étaient placées sous diète déficiente en potassium. Nous avons démontré dans les souris mâles une implication de CAP2 dans la régulation de la H+, K+- ATPase colonique, des récepteurs membranaires à la progestérone et de leur partenaires de liaison, ainsi que dans la possible signalisation médiée par le clivage du récepteur aux glucocorticoïdes. Nous avons étudié l'interaction possible entre CAPI et CAP2 en générant et en caractérisant deux groupes d'étude de souris différents, porteurs de différentes mutations hypomorphiques dans le gène de CAPI, et déficients pour CAP2. Nous avons pu montrer qu'une expression équilibrée de CAPI et CAP2 est requise pour le maintien de l'intégrité de la peau et pour le développement normal du placenta. Les embryons knock-out pour CAPI meurent suite à une défaillance placentaire, et la délétion additionnelle et combinée de CAP2 permet la survie jusqu'à la naissance. Nous supposons que CAPI et CAP2 sont impliqués dans la même voie de signalisation au niveau du placenta que celle proposée dans les études de cancer, impliquant l'intégrine a5, ERK, AKT, E- et N-cadhérine. De plus, nous avons étudié si CAPI est impliqué dans la pathogenèse et la susceptibilité de colite chronique expérimentale dans un modèle de rat mutant. En administrant aux rats mutants pour CAPI du Dextran sodium sulfate, nous avons induit une inflammation chronique du côlon, et nous avons pu mettre en évidence le rôle protecteur de CAPI au niveau histopathologique et au niveau clinique. En conclusion, nous avons démontré que CAP2 n'est pas un régulateur essentiel de l'homéostasie sodique médiée par ENaC in vivo, mais plutôt de l'homéostasie potassique d'une manière dépendante du sexe et impliquant la H+, K+-ATPase colonique, les récepteurs membranaires à la progestérone et le récepteur aux glucocorticoïdes. Nous avons étudié si CAPI et CAP2 interagissent au niveau fonctionnel, et nous avons montré qu'une expression équilibrée entre CAPI et CAP2 est requise dans la peau et le placenta. L'expression déséquilibrée de CAPI et CAP2 mène à une altération de la signalisation associée à l'EMT. Nous avons étudié si CAPI est impliqué dans la pathogenèse et la susceptibilité de colite chronique expérimentale, et nous avons démontré le rôle protecteur de CAPI dans le côlon distal.
Resumo:
NLRC5, a member of the NOD-like receptor (NLR) protein family, has recently been characterized as the master transcriptional regulator of MHCI molecules in lymphocytes, in which it is highly expressed. However, its role in activated dendritic cells (DCs), which are instrumental to initiate T cell responses, remained elusive. We show in this study that, following stimulation of DCs with inflammatory stimuli, not only did NLRC5 level increase, but also its importance in directing MHCI transcription. Despite markedly reduced mRNA and intracellular H2-K levels, we unexpectedly observed nearly normal H2-K surface display in Nlrc5(-/-) DCs. Importantly, this discrepancy between a strong intracellular and a mild surface defect in H2-K levels was observed also in DCs with H2-K transcription defects independent of Nlrc5. Hence, alongside with demonstrating the importance of NLRC5 in MHCI transcription in activated DCs, we uncover a general mechanism counteracting low MHCI surface expression. In agreement with the decreased amount of neosynthesized MHCI, Nlrc5(-/-) DCs exhibited a defective capacity to display endogenous Ags. However, neither T cell priming by endogenous Ags nor cross-priming ability was substantially affected in activated Nlrc5(-/-) DCs. Altogether, these data show that Nlrc5 deficiency, despite significantly affecting MHCI transcription and Ag display, is not sufficient to hinder T cell activation, underlining the robustness of the T cell priming process by activated DCs.
Resumo:
The objective of this thesis was to study the removal of gases from paper mill circulation waters experimentally and to provide data for CFD modeling. Flow and bubble size measurements were carried out in a laboratory scale open gas separation channel. Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) technique was used to measure the gas and liquid flow fields, while bubble size measurements were conducted using digital imaging technique with back light illumination. Samples of paper machine waters as well as a model solution were used for the experiments. The PIV results show that the gas bubbles near the feed position have the tendency to escape from the circulation channel at a faster rate than those bubbles which are further away from the feed position. This was due to an increased rate of bubble coalescence as a result of the relatively larger bubbles near the feed position. Moreover, a close similarity between the measured slip velocities of the paper mill waters and that of literature values was obtained. It was found that due to dilution of paper mill waters, the observed average bubble size was considerably large as compared to the average bubble sizes in real industrial pulp suspension and circulation waters. Among the studied solutions, the model solution has the highest average drag coefficient value due to its relatively high viscosity. The results were compared to a 2D steady sate CFD simulation model. A standard Euler-Euler k-ε turbulence model was used in the simulations. The channel free surface was modeled as a degassing boundary. From the drag models used in the simulations, the Grace drag model gave velocity fields closest to the experimental values. In general, the results obtained from experiments and CFD simulations are in good qualitative agreement.
Resumo:
Calcium ions (Ca2+) trigger the contraction of vascular myocytes and the level of free intracellular Ca2+ within the myocyte is precisely regulated by sequestration and extrusion mechanisms. Extensive evidence indicates that a defect in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ plays a role in the augmented vascular reactivity characteristic of clinical and experimental hypertension. For example, arteries from spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) have an increased contractile sensitivity to extracellular Ca2+ and intracellular Ca2+ levels are elevated in aortic smooth muscle cells of SHR. We hypothesize that these changes are due to an increase in membrane Ca2+ channel density and possibly function in vascular myocytes from hypertensive animals. Several observations using various experimental approaches support this hypothesis: 1) the contractile activity in response to depolarizing stimuli is increased in arteries from hypertensive animals demonstrating increased voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel activity in hypertension; 2) Ca2+ channel agonists such as Bay K 8644 produce contractions in isolated arterial segments from hypertensive rats and minimal contraction in those from normotensive rats; 3) intracellular Ca2+ concentration is abnormally increased in vascular myocytes from hypertensive animals following treatment with Ca2+ channel agonists and depolarizing interventions, and 4) using the voltage-clamp technique, the inward Ca2+ current in arterial myocytes from hypertensive rats is nearly twice as large as that from myocytes of normotensive rats. We suggest that an alteration in Ca2+ channel function and/or an increase in Ca2+ channel density, resulting from increased channel synthesis or reduced turnover, underlies the increased vascular reactivity characteristic of hypertension
Resumo:
The influence of voltage on the conductance of toad skin was studied to identify the time course of the activation/deactivation dynamics of voltage-dependent Cl- channels located in the apical membrane of mitochondrion-rich cells in this tissue. Positive apical voltage induced an important conductance inhibition which took a few seconds to fully develop and was instantaneously released by pulse inversion to negative voltage, indicating a short-duration memory of the inhibiting factors. Sinusoidal stimulation at 23.4 mM [Cl-] showed hysteresis in the current versus voltage curves, even at very low frequency, suggesting that the rate of voltage application was also relevant for the inhibition/releasing effect to develop. We conclude that the voltage modulation of apical Cl- permeability is essentially a fast process and the apparent slow components of activation/deactivation obtained in the whole skin are a consequence of a gradual voltage build-up across the apical membrane due to voltage sharing between apical and basolateral membranes
Resumo:
The effect of several ions (Cl-, Na+, K+, Ca2+) on the rate of plasminogen (Pg) activation by recombinant staphylokinase (rSTA) is reported. Both monovalent and divalent ions affect the rate at which Pg is activated by rSTA, in a concentration-dependent manner (range 0-100 mM). In almost all cases, a decrease of the initial velocity of activation was observed. Cl- showed the most striking inhibitory effect at low concentrations (64% at 10 mM). However, in the presence of a fibrin surface, this inhibition was attenuated to 38%. Surprisingly, 10 mM Ca2+ enhanced the Pg activation rate 21% when a polymerized fibrin matrix was present. These data support the idea that ions can modulate the rate of Pg activation through a mechanism that may be associated with changes in the molecular conformation of the zymogen. This effect is strongly dependent on the presence of a fibrin clot.
Resumo:
Connexin46 (Cx46) forms functional hemichannels in the absence of contact by an apposed hemichannel and we have used these hemichannels to study gating and permeation at the single channel level with high time resolution. Using both cell-attached and -excised patch configurations, we find that single Cx46 hemichannels exhibit some properties expected of half of a gap junction channel, as well as novel properties. Cx46 hemichannels have a large unitary conductance (~300 pS) and a relatively large pore as inferred from permeability to TEA. Both monovalent cations and anions can permeate, but cations are substantially more permeable. The open channel conductance shows marked inward rectification in symmetric salts. We find that the conductance and permeability properties of Cx46 cell-cell channels can be explained by the series addition of two hemichannels. These data suggest that the pore structures of unapposed hemichannels and cell-cell channels are conserved. Also like cell-cell channels, unapposed Cx46 hemichannels are closed by elevated levels of H+ or Ca2+ ions on the cytoplasmic face. Closure occurs in excised patches indicating that the actions of these agents do not require a soluble cytoplasmic factor. Fast (<0.5 ms) application of H+ to either side of the open hemichannel causes an immediate small reduction in unitary conductance followed by complete closure with latencies that are dependent on H+ concentration and side of application; sensitivity is much greater to H+ on the cytoplasmic side. Closure by cytoplasmic H+ does not require that the hemichannel be open. Thus, H+ ions readily permeate Cx46 hemichannels, but at high enough concentration close them by acting at a cytoplasmic site(s) that causes a conformational change resulting in complete closure. Extracellular H+ may permeate to act on the cytoplasmic site or act on a lower affinity extracellular site. Thus, the unapposed hemichannel is a valuable tool in addressing fundamental questions concerning the operation of gap junction channels that are difficult to answer by existing methods. The ability of Cx46, and perhaps other connexins, to form functional unapposed hemichannels that are opened by moderate depolarization may represent an unexplored role of connexins as mediators of transport across the plasma membrane.
Resumo:
The present study analyzes Na+ and K+ disturbances caused by low pH in two catfish species from the Amazon River. Corydoras adolfoi inhabits ion-poor, black-stained, low pH (3.5-4.0) waters, while C. schwartzi is native to ion-rich waters at circumneutral pH. Fish were exposed to pH 3.5 Ca2+-free, and Ca2+-enriched (~500 µmol/l) water to determine the protective effects of calcium. Net Na+ and K+ fluxes were measured in the water collected from the fish experimental chambers. C. adolfoi was unable to control the Na+ efflux at low pH, exhibiting Na+ loss up to -594 ± 84 nmol g-1 h-1 during the first hour. After 3 and 6 h, net Na+ flux increased by 7- and 23-fold, respectively. In C. schwartzi, at pH 3.5, the initial high Na+ loss (-1,063 ± 73 nmol g-1 h-1) was gradually attenuated. A K+ loss occurred in both species, but remained relatively constant throughout exposure. High [Ca2+] affected ion losses in both species. C. adolfoi had 70% loss attenuation, indicating incapacity to control Na+ efflux. In C. schwartzi, elevated [Ca2+] completely prevented the Na+ losses caused by exposure to low pH. Rather different patterns were seen for K+ fluxes, with C. adolfoi showing no K+ disruption when exposed to low pH/high [Ca2+]. Thus, C. adolfoi loses Na+ during acid exposure, but has the ability to control K+ loss, while C. schwartzi controls diffusive Na+ loss but exhibits a slightly higher K+ loss. Ion balance was influenced by [Ca2+] at low pH in C. schwartzi but not in C. adolfoi.
Resumo:
It has been reported that star fruit can lead to a fatal outcome in uremic patients. The intoxication syndrome consists of hiccups, mental confusion, dizziness, and vomiting. On the other hand, folk medicine uses teas and infusions of carambola leaves to treat headache, vomiting, cough, insomnia, and diabetes. This motivated us to determine if Averrhoa carambola can act on the contractility and automaticity of the guinea pig heart. We measured the atrial isometric force in stimulated left atria and determined the chronotropic changes in spontaneously beating right atria. The carambola leaf extracts (1.5 mg/ml) abolished the contractile force in a concentration-dependent manner. Among the crude, methanolic, ethanolic, aqueous, and acetic extracts, the aqueous one was the most potent (EC50 = 520 ± 94 µg/ml; flavonoids and tannins are the main constituents; Na+ and K+ contents in 1.0 mg/ml of aqueous extract were 0.12 ± 0.016 and 1.19 ± 0.15 mM, respectively). The aqueous extract abolished the positive Bowditch staircase phenomenon and reduced the inotropic response to CaCl2 (0.17-8.22 mM), events that are dependent on the cellular Ca2+ inward current. The adrenergic, muscarinic or opioid membrane receptors do not seem to participate in the mechanism of action of the cardioactive substance(s). In spontaneously beating atria, the aqueous extract promoted a negative chronotropic effect that was antagonized by 0.1 µM isoproterenol bitartrate. With this agonist, the EC50 of the aqueous extract increased from 133 ± 58 to 650 ± 100 µg/ml. These data regarding the effect of A. carambola on guinea pig atrial contractility and automaticity indicate an L-type Ca2+ channel blockade.
Resumo:
Store-operated Ca2+ entry plays an important role in Ca2+ homeostasis in cells but the mechanisms of control of these channels are not completely understood. We describe an investigation of the role of the CD38-cyclic-ADP-ribose (cADPR)-ryanodine-channel (RyR) signaling pathway in store-operated Ca2+ entry in human smooth muscle. We observed that human myometrial cells have a functional store-operated Ca2+ entry mechanism. Furthermore, we observed the presence of transient receptor potential 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6 ion channels in human myometrial cells. Store-operated Ca2+ transient was inhibited by at least 50-70% by several inhibitors of the RyR, including ryanodine (10 µM), dantrolene (10 µM), and ruthenium red (10 µM). Furthermore, the cell permeable inhibitor of the cADPR-system, 8-Br-cADPR (100 µM), is a potent inhibitor of the store-operated entry, decreasing the store operated entry by 80%. Pre-incubation of cells with 100 µM cADPR and the hydrolysis-resistant cADPR analog 3-deaza-cADPR (50 µM), but not with ADP-ribose (ADPR) leads to a 1.6-fold increase in the store-operated Ca2+ transient. In addition, we observed that nicotinamide (1-10 mM), an inhibitor of cADPR synthesis, also leads to inhibition of the store-operated Ca2+ transient by 50-80%. Finally, we observed that the transient receptor potential channels, RyR, and CD38 can be co-immunoprecipitated, indicating that they interact in vivo. Our observations clearly implicate the CD38-cADPR-ryanodine signaling pathway in the regulation of store-operated Ca2+ entry in human smooth muscle cells.
Resumo:
We have shown that myocardial dysfunction induced by food restriction is related to calcium handling. Although cardiac function is depressed in food-restricted animals, there is limited information about the molecular mechanisms that lead to this abnormality. The present study evaluated the effects of food restriction on calcium cycling, focusing on sarcoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA2), phospholamban (PLB), and ryanodine channel (RYR2) mRNA expressions in rat myocardium. Male Wistar-Kyoto rats, 60 days old, were submitted to ad libitum feeding (control rats) or 50% diet restriction for 90 days. The levels of left ventricle SERCA2, PLB, and RYR2 were measured using semi-quantitative RT-PCR. Body and ventricular weights were reduced in 50% food-restricted animals. RYR2 mRNA was significantly decreased in the left ventricle of the food-restricted group (control = 5.92 ± 0.48 vs food-restricted group = 4.84 ± 0.33, P < 0.01). The levels of SERCA2 and PLB mRNA were similar between groups (control = 8.38 ± 0.44 vs food-restricted group = 7.96 ± 0.45, and control = 1.52 ± 0.06 vs food-restricted group = 1.53 ± 0.10, respectively). Down-regulation of RYR2 mRNA expressions suggests that chronic food restriction promotes abnormalities in sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release.