Effects of melatonin and its analogs on the voltage-activated calcium current of embryonic chick ventricular cardiomyocytes were investigated. Myocytes were dissociated from 14- to 16-day-old chicks (yellow Red Rob) embryonic hearts and cultured for 2 3 days. Calcium currents were studied by the patch-clamp technique. Whole-cell current recording showed nifedipine-sensitive, high-voltage-activated L-type calcium current inactivated in 70-100 ms during the voltage step period of 200 ms. There was no evidence of low-voltage-activated T-type calcium channels. Melatonin (ejected solution: 50 micromol/L melatonin; concentration at the vicinity of recording cell: about 1-5 micromol/L melatonin) and its analogs, 2-iodomelatonin and 2-iodo-n-butanol-5-methoxytryptamine, significantly increased the amplitude of the calcium current by 42-62%. The effect of melatonin on the L-type calcium current was not desensitised by repeated melatonin treatment. Our results suggest a specific melatonin receptor-mediated action on the calcium channel of the embryonic chick myocyte. The melatonin-induced increase in high-voltage calcium current may increase myocyte contractility and enhance cardiac output. A regulatory role of melatonin on the chick cardiac function should be further considered.
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