Abstract: | In response to extracellular application of 50 microM ATP, all individual porcine aortic smooth muscle cells respond with rapid rises from basal Ca2+]i to peak Ca2+]i within 5 s. The time from stimulus to the peak of the Ca2+]i response increases with decreasing concentration of ATP. At ATP concentrations of 0.5 microM and below, the time to the Ca2+]i peak varies more significantly from cell to cell than at higher concentrations, and each cell shows complicated initiation and decay kinetics. For any individual cell, the lag phase before a response decreases with increasing concentration of ATP. An increase in lag time with decreasing ATP concentration is also observed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, but the lag phase is more pronounced, especially at concentrations of ATP below 0.5 microM. Whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology shows that in porcine aortic smooth muscle cells, ATP stimulates an inward current carried mainly by Cl- ion efflux with a time course similar to the Ca2+]i changes and no detectable current from an ATP-gated cation channel. A simple signal cascade initiation kinetics model, starting with nucleotide receptor activation leading to IP3-mediated Ca2+ release from IP3-sensitive internal stores, fits the data and suggests that the kinetics of the Ca2+ response are dominated by upstream signal cascade components. |