I The influence of ouabain (0.4 jM) on contractile force and cellular Na and K concentrations was investigated in isolated left atria of the guinea-pig at rest and at different beat frequencies. Simultaneously the binding of ouabain to the tissue was determined. 2 Strict dependence of rates of onset of positive iontropic action and of binding of ouabain on beat frequency are limited to conditions where no alterations of cellular Na and K concentrations occur. A correlation was observed between sodium flux per unit time and the development of positive inotropism and binding to the receptors of ouabain. 3 Ouabain exerts its positive inotropic effect without affecting the intracellular Na and K concentrations in spite of the fact that under these conditions even the majority of binding sites, i.e. Na-Kadenosine triphosphatases (Na-K-ATPases), are occupied by the drug. The positive inotropic effect. may be explained by a ouabain-induced conformational alteration of the Na-K-ATPase which leads to structural alterations of the plasmalemma connected with an increased availability of coupling calcium. 4 Increasing the frequency of stimulation over a critical value, which appears to be determined by an overloading of the Na pump, induces a decrease in contractile force, cellular accumulation of Na and loss of K, and eventually contracture.
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