Parvalbumin is a Ca 2+ binding protein that functions as a relaxing factor in fast skeletal muscle fibers by acting as a delayed Ca 2+ sink. As the cardiac contraction/relaxation cycle has to be constant and continuous, a precise rise and fall of intracellular calcium ions is required. Thus, cardiac muscles should contain certain Ca 2+ binding proteins to buffer Ca 2+ as in skeletal muscle fibers. Using immunohistochemistry techniques, we demonstrate that parvalbumin is found in atrial and ventricular cardiomyocytes, and is also located in the sinoatrial (SA) and atrioventricular (AV) nodes. The role of parvalbumin in cardiomyocytes may be related to the process of cardiomyocyte relaxation by facilitating Ca 2+ transport from the myofibrils into the SR, similar to what occurs in skeletal muscles. In addition, parvalbumin may act to buffer Ca 2+ concentrations in the SA and AV nodes.