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Transverse-axial tubules (TTs) are key structures involved in cardiac excitation-contraction coupling and can become deranged in disease. Although optical measurement of TTs is frequently employed to assess TT abundance and regularity, TT dimensions are generally below the diffraction limit of optical microscopy so determination of tubule size is problematic. TT diameter was measured by labeling both local surface membrane area and volume with fluorescent probes (FM4-64 and calcein, respectively), correcting image asymmetry by image processing and using the relationship between surface area and volume for a geometric primitive. This method shows that TTs have a mean (±SEM) diameter of 356±18nm in rabbit and 169±15nm in mouse (p<0.001). Rabbit TT diameters were more variable than those of mouse (p<0.01) and the smallest TT detected was 41nm in mouse and the largest 695nm in rabbit. These estimates are consistent with TT diameters derived from the more limited sampling of high-pressure frozen samples by electron tomography (which examines only a small fraction of the cell volume). Other measures of TT abundance and geometry (such as volume, membrane fractions and direction) were also derived. On the physiological time scale of E-C coupling (milliseconds), the average TT electrical space constant is ~175μm in rabbit and ~120μm in mouse and is ~50% of the steady-state space constant. This is sufficient to ensure reasonable electrical uniformity across normal cells. The image processing strategy and shape-based 3D approach to feature quantification is also generally applicable to other problems in quantification of sub-cellular anatomy.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.yjmcc.2017.05.003

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2017-07-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

108

Pages

1 - 7

Total pages

6

Keywords

Cardiac myocyte, Confocal imaging, Fluorescent dyes, Geometry, Image processing, T-tubules, Animals, Heart Ventricles, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Mice, Microscopy, Confocal, Myocytes, Cardiac, Rabbits, Sarcoplasmic Reticulum