Reduced conduction reserve in the diabetic rat heart: role of iPLA2 activation in the response to ischemia
Hearts from streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats have previously been shown to have impaired intercellular electrical coupling, due to reorganization (lateralization) of connexin43 proteins. Due to the resulting reduction in conduction reserve, conduction velocity in diabetic hearts is more sensitive to conditions that reduce cellular excitability or intercellular electrical coupling. Diabetes is a known risk factor for cardiac ischemia, a condition associated with both reduced cellular excitability and reduced intercellular coupling. Activation of Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2) is known to be part of the response to acute ischemia and may contribute to the intercellular uncoupling by causing increased levels of arachidonic acid and lysophosphatidyl choline. Normally perfused diabetic hearts are known to exhibit increased iPLA2 activity and may thus be particularly sensitive to further activation of these enzymes. In this study, we used voltage-sensitive dye mapping to assess changes in conduction velocity in response to acute global ischemia in Langendorff-perfused STZ-induced diabetic hearts. Conduction slowing in response to ischemia was significantly larger in STZ-induced diabetic hearts compared with healthy controls. Similarly, slowing of conduction velocity in response to acidosis was also more pronounced in STZ-induced diabetic hearts. Inhibition of iPLA2 activity using bromoenol lactone (BEL; 10 μM) had no effect on the response to ischemia in healthy control hearts. However, in STZ-induced diabetic hearts, BEL significantly reduced the amount of conduction slowing observed beginning 5 min after the onset of ischemia. BEL treatment also significantly increased the time to onset of sustained arrhythmias in STZ-induced diabetic hearts but had no effect on the time to arrhythmia in healthy control hearts. Thus, our results suggest that iPLA2 activation in response to acute ischemia in STZ-induced diabetic hearts is more pronounced than in control hearts and that this response is a significant contributor to arrhythmogenic conduction slowing.