View publication

↩ Back to all publications
Publication
PropertyValue
Working Groups AG Lehnart
SubprojectA05, B05
Open AccessOpen Access Yes
Publication TypeReview
Peer ReviewedUnknown
PMIDPubMed ID 23504549
DOIDOI 10.1093/cvr/cvt058
Publication Year2013
TitleImaging T-tubules: dynamic membrane structures for deep functions Wikidata
JournalCardiovascular Research
ISSN0008-6363
eISSN1755-3245
URL http://cardiovascres.oxfordjournals.org/content/98/2/162
Pages162-164
Issue2
Volume98
Journal AbbreviationCardiovasc Res
ExtraThis editorial refers to ‘Emerging mechanisms of T-tubule remodelling in heart failure’ by A. Guo et al ., pp. 204–215, this issue and ‘Ultrastructural uncoupling between T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum in human heart failure’ by H.-B. Zhang, et al ., pp. 269–276, this issue. Extensive intracellular contacts of the endo/sarcoplasmic reticulum (ER/SR) with transverse tubules (TTs) are fundamental for intracellular Ca2+ cycling in cardiac muscle. For this, TTs extend from the cytoplasmic surface deep into the cell, setting up a complex three-dimensional (3D) membrane network, referred to as ‘transverse axial tubular system’ (TATS) ( Figure 1 A ). The TATS extends over several orders of magnitude in size, e.g. from local TT diameters <100 nm to cell-wide continuous networks expanding over 100 μm, in order to provide thousands of subcellular TT contacts with the ER organelle via junctional SR (jSR) contacts in a typical ventricular myocyte (VM). Not surprisingly, approaches to study the TT membrane structures and properties of the TATS network encompass different imaging and physiological methods. However, until recently ultrastructural TT resolution vs. continuous representation of TATS regions had to be traded against each other. Just imagine representative EM studies (smallest field of view, possible resolution ≤1 nm) when compared with confocal fluorescence microscopy of histological samples (field of view of ∼150 × 150 µm at ∼250 nm resolution using ×63 objectives). Meanwhile this methodological gap is addressed by recent super-resolution fluorescence microscopy approaches (see below).1 Despite apparent gaps between imaging resolution and the nanometric nature of subcellular membrane compartments, conventional fluorescence microscopy is essential to characterize TATS membranes in living samples. In particular, functional imaging studies of isolated cells and two-photon imaging of intact heart tissue have related typical TATS architectures to subcellular functions like Ca2+ release events (sparks) in resting cells (for diastole) or Ca2+ transients … PMID: 23504549
AuthorsKohl T, Lehnart SE
First AuthorKohl T
Last AuthorLehnart SE
ScholiaScholia Wikidata-based representation at Scholia

 External Resources

 academic...58.pdf  Article fulltext

 gro-2/14632  GRO.publications identifier

 9606  NCBI Taxonomy (Homo sapiens)

 0000-0002-8115-3513  ORCID identifier (Stephan E. Lehnart)

 031t5w623  ROR identifier (031t5w623, German Centre for Cardiovascular Research)

 021ft0n22  ROR identifier (021ft0n22, University Medical Center Göttingen)

 Q43187868  Wikidata ID