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. 2021 Feb 26;101(6):680–689. doi: 10.1038/s41374-021-00538-0

Fig. 4. L-carnitine suppressed heat-induced increases of intracellular Ca2+ concentration.

Fig. 4

A Heat (>43 °C) induced an increase in Ca2+ influx (n = 205) whereas non-treated control cells maintained a constant Ca2+ baseline (n = 9). B Same experiment as shown in A, but in the presence of L-carnitine. L-carnitine (1 mmol/l) partially suppressed the heat-induced Ca2+ increase (n = 33). C Summary of the experiments with heat and L-carnitine. The asterisks (*) designate significant increases in [Ca2+]i with heat (t = 300 s; n = 205; p < 0.005; paired tested) compared to control (t = 100 s). The hashtags (#) indicate statistically significant differences in fluorescence ratios between heat with and without L-carnitine (t = 300 s; n = 33–205; p < 0.005; non-paired tested).