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1.
Glucose, lactate and pyruvate efflux by the perfused liver of the walking catfish, Clarias batrachus was studied during aniso-osmotic exposure. During hypo-osmotic exposure (−80 mOsmol l−1, maintained with NaCl), glucose, lactate and pyruvate efflux by the perfused liver significantly decreased by 55, 19 and 16%, respectively. During hyper-osmotic exposure (+80 mOsmol l−1, maintained with NaCl), efflux increased by 57, 12 and 18%, respectively. Similar effects of glucose, lactate and pyruvate efflux by the perfused liver was also seen when the anisotonicity of the medium was adjusted with mannitol instead of NaCl. The decrease of glucose, lactate and pyruvate efflux during hypo-osmotic exposure was correlated with the stimulation of glycogen synthesis and the reverse was true during hyper-osmotic exposure. These observations were supported by changes in glycogen phosphorylase a (GPase a) and glycogen synthase a (GSase a) activities. During hypo-osmotic exposure (−80 mOsmol l−1), the GPase a activity decreased by 1.93 fold and GSase a activity increased by 1.63 fold, while during hyper-osmotic exposure (+80 mOsmol l−1), the GPase a activity increased by 1.58 fold and GSase a activity decreased by 1.95 fold. The total activity of both the enzymes were not effected by a short term exposure to aniso-osmotic conditions, suggesting that the alterations in GPase a and GSase a activity were mainly due to changes of their phosphorylation status during aniso-osmotic exposure. A direct correlation exists between glucose efflux and the hydration status of the perfused liver. These alterations of glucose metabolism are probably necessary by this walking catfish to meet the different energy demand, and also for maintenance of glucose homeostasis under osmotic stress.  相似文献   

2.
Glycogen serves as a metabolic reserve and is involved in macromolecular synthesis. Glycogen phosphorylase (GPase) is a key enzyme involved in intracellular glycogen catabolism, catalyzing the first step in glycogen degradation. In the diapause, GPase catalyzes glycogen into the closely related molecule, sorbitol. In this study, the full-length cDNA of the GPase gene (2,790 bp) was isolated from Artemia sinica for the first time by rapid amplification of cDNA ends technology. The GPase gene encoded a protein of 853 amino acids belonging to the Glycosyltransferase GTB type superfamily. The expression pattern and location of GPase were investigated at various stages during the embryonic development of A. sinica using real-time PCR and in situ hybridization. High GPase expression was detected at the 0 and 5 h stages. Subsequently, expression declined and was maintained at a low level during the stages from 10 to 40 h following by a small increase at day 3. Expression was downregulated at temperatures ranging from 25 to 20 °C and was subsequently upregulated in the range 15–5 °C. In situ hybridization assays showed wide distribution of the GPase gene during different developmental stages. From the results of this study, we conclude that the GPase gene expression is stress-related and might play an important role in Artemia development and metabolism.  相似文献   

3.
Upstream intermediates of intracellular signaling involved in cell volume regulation remain poorly explored. Recently, we demonstrated that osmolarity-induced volume changes in permeabilized cells were several-fold higher than those observed with intact cells, indicating the osmosensing properties of cytoplasmic gel. To further examine the role of cytoplasmic biogel in cell volume regulation, we compared the action of short-term heat treatment on volume changes in intact and permeabilized A549 cells. Pretreatment of A549 cells at 48 °C suppressed swelling triggered by dissipation of Donnan’s equilibrium as well as by hyposmotic medium. Significantly, heat treatment completely abolished the action of hyposomotic medium on volume changes in permeabilized cells, showing that temperature elevation suppresses osmosensing properties via its effect on biogel rather than on plasma membrane water permeability. Identical heat treatment blocked the regulatory volume decrease (RVD) as well as the increment of Ba2+-sensitive K+-channel activity seen in control cells exposed to hyposmotic swelling. Unlike swelling, hyperosmotic shrinkage was decreased by twofold in cells subjected to 10-min preincubation at 50 °C. Our results disclose that osmosensing by cytoplasmic gel is a key event in the RVD triggered by hypotonic swelling. The role of biogel and plasma membrane in intracellular signaling triggered by hyperosmotic shrinkage should be further investigated.  相似文献   

4.
Background information. Activation of MAPKs (mitogen‐activated protein kinases), in particular ERK1/2 (extracellular‐signal‐regulated kinase 1/2), has been reported to take place in a large variety of cell types after hypo‐osmotic cell swelling. Depending on cell type, ERK1/2 phosphorylation can then serve or not the RVD (regulatory volume decrease) process. The present study investigates ERK1/2 activation after aniso‐osmotic stimulations in turbot hepatocytes and the potential link between phosphorylation of these proteins and RVD. Results. In turbot hepatocytes, Western‐blot analysis shows that a hypo‐osmotic shock from 320 to 240 mOsm·kg?1 induced a rapid increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation, whereas a hyper‐osmotic shock from 320 to 400 mOsm·kg?1 induced no significant change in the phosphorylation of these proteins. The hypo‐osmotic‐induced ERK1/2 phosphorylation was significantly prevented when hypo‐osmotic shock was performed in the presence of the specific MEK (MAPK/ERK kinase) inhibitor PD98059 (100 μM). In these conditions, the RVD process was not altered, suggesting that ERK1/2 did not participate in this process in turbot hepatocytes. Moreover, the hypo‐osmotic‐induced activation of ERK1/2 was significantly prevented by breakdown of extracellular ATP by apyrase (10 units·ml?1), by inhibition of purinergic P2 receptors by suramin (100 μM) or by calcium depletion using EGTA (1 mM) and thapsigargin (1 μM). Conclusions. In turbot hepatocytes, hypo‐osmotic swelling but not hyper‐osmotic shrinkage induced the activation of ERK1/2. However, these proteins do not seem to be involved in the RVD process. Their hypo‐osmotic‐induced activation is partially due to cascades of signalling events triggered by the binding of released ATP on purinergic P2 receptors and requires the presence of calcium.  相似文献   

5.
Isolated rat hepatocytes were exposed to hypotonic media (225 mosmol/l) for 5 and 15 min and processed for a quantitative electron microscopic stereologic analysis. Within 5 min of hypotonicity, the hepatocyte volume increased by 25% and thereatter displayed a volume regulatory decrease leading to mean cellular volume, which was 16% above that of controls. Stereologic analysis of the major subcellular compartment, the cytosol, showed an identical change as the whole cell. In contrast to that, the mitochondrial compartment increased in volume by 30% within the first 5 min of exposure and returned by regulatory volume decrease back to values of the isotonic controls after 15 min of hypotonicity. In contrast, hypotonicity (220 mosmol/l)-stimulation of flux through mitochondrial glutaminase and the glycine cleavage enzyme complex, as assessed by 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamine or [1-14C]glycine in isolated perfused rat liver persisted throughout a 15-min period of hypotonic exposure. Thus hypotonicity-induced alterations of mitochondrial metabolism apparently do not parallel the time course of mitochondrial volume changes. This suggests that persistent mitochondrial swelling is not required for functional alterations, but that the latter may be triggered by the initial swelling of mitochondria. Hypotonic exposure did not alter the nuclear volume of isolated hepatocytes. Cell membrane surface nearly doubled after 5 min of hypotonic exposure, but returned within 15 min of exposure to values observed in normotonic media. This may reflect the participation of exocytosis in hepatocyte volume regulation. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
The response of isolated digestive cells of the digestive gland of Mytilus galloprovincialis to hypotonic shock was studied using videometric methods. The isolated cells exposed to a rapid change (from 1100 to 800 mosmol kg?1) of the bathing solution osmolality swelled but thereafter underwent a regulatory volume decrease (RVD), tending to recover the original size. When the hypotonic stress was applied in the presence of quinine and glibenclamide, known inhibitors of swelling activated ion channels, the cells did not exhibit an RVD response; in addition, they showed a larger increase in size in respect to control cells. These observations suggest that the digestive cells of the digestive gland have the machinery to cope with the hyposmotic shock allowing them to exhibit a small but significant RVD preventing an excessive increase in cell size. The pharmacological treatment of digestive cells during the RVD experiments suggests that cell volume is regulated by K+ and Cl? efflux followed by an obliged water efflux from the cell. The involvement of organic osmolytes such as taurine and betaine seems to be excluded by NMR measurement on digestive cells. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
This study, using 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed enrichment of glycogen carbon (C1) from 13C-labelled (C1) glucose indicating a direct pathway for glycogen synthesis from glucose in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) hepatocytes. There was a direct relationship between hepatocyte glycogen content and total glycogen synthase, total glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen phosphorylase a activities, whereas the relationship was inverse between glycogen content and % glycogen synthase a and glycogen synthase a/glycogen phosphorylase a ratio. Incubation of hepatocytes with glucose (3 or 10 mmol·1-1) did not modify either glycogen synthase or glycogen phosphorylase activities. Insulin (porcine, 10-8 mol·1-1) in the medium significantly decreased total glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen phosphorylase a activities, but had no significant effect on glycogen synthase activities when compared to the controls (absence of insulin). In the presence of 10 mmol·1-1 glucose, insulin increased % glycogen synthase a and decreased % glycogen phosphorylase a activities in trout hepatocytes. Also, the effect of insulin on the activities of % glycogen synthase a and glycogen synthase a/glycogen phosphorylase a ratio were more pronounced at low than at high hepatocyte glycogen content. The results indicate that in trout hepatocytes both the glycogen synthetic and breakdown pathways are active concurrently in vitro and any subtle alterations in the phosphorylase to synthase ratio may determine the hepatic glycogen content. Insulin plays an important role in the regulation of glycogen metabolism in rainbow trout hepatocytes. The effect of insulin on hepatocyte glycogen content may be under the control of several factors, including plasma glucose concentration and hepatocyte glycogen content.  相似文献   

8.
In vivo human esophageal epithelial cells are regularly exposed to hyposmolal stress. This stress, however, only becomes destructive when the surface epithelial cell (barrier) layers are breached and there is contact of the hyposmolal solution with the basolateral cell membranes. The present investigation was designed to examine the effects of hyposmolal stress in the latter circumstance using as a model for human esophageal epithelial cells the noncancer-derived HET-1A cell line. Cell volume and the response to hyposmolal stress in suspensions of HET-1A cells were determined by cell passage through a Coulter Counter Multisizer II. HET-1A cells behaved as osmometers over the range of 280 to 118 mosmol/kg H(2)O with rapid increases in cell volume < or = 15-20% above baseline. Following swelling, the cells exhibited regulatory volume decrease (RVD), restoring baseline volume within 30 min, despite continued hyposmolal stress. With the use of pharmacologic agents and ion substitutions, RVD appeared to result from rapid activation of parallel K(+) and Cl(-) conductance pathways and this was subsequently joined by activation of a KCl cotransporter. Exposure to hyposmolal stress in an acidic environment, pH 6.6, inhibited, but did not abolish, RVD. These data indicate that human esophageal epithelial cells can protect against hyposmolal stress by RVD and that the redundancy in mechanisms may, to some extent, serve as added protection in patients with reflux disease when hyposmolal stress may occur in an acidic environment.  相似文献   

9.
Kerrigan MJ  Hall AC 《Biorheology》2005,42(4):283-293
Articular chondrocytes are exposed to significant changes in extracellular osmolarity during normal joint activity, which can lead to changes in cell volume and metabolism of the extracellular matrix (ECM). Chondrocytes can respond to cell swelling/shrinking by volume regulatory pathways, but the signalling pathways are poorly understood although a role for the cytoskeleton is frequently implicated. Here, we have investigated the effects of disruption of the chondrocyte F-actin cytoskeleton on the recovery of cell volume by RVD. The cytoskeleton was perturbed using the relatively specific agent latrunculin B (5 microM; 30 min) and loss of F-actin integrity quantified using fluorescent phalloidin-labelling and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Imaging of isolated chondrocytes labelled with Fura-2 to measure the fluorescence associated with cell volume changes, showed that the extent of hypo-osmotic swelling was unaffected by latrunculin B treatment. Two categories of the chondrocyte RVD response were observed: 'fast' RVD where at 3 min post-osmotic challenge there was a recovery in cell fluorescence of >or=80%, whereas other cells exhibited 'slow' RVD. Latrunculin B increased the proportion of chondrocytes demonstrating 'fast' RVD by approximately 10 fold and reduced those cells showing 'slow' RVD. An inhibitor of chondrocyte RVD (REV 5901) had no significant effect on the integrity of the cytoskeleton showing that the RVD response could be inhibited independent of the state of the F-actin cytoskeleton. These results suggest that the intact cortical F-actin cytoskeleton has a restraining effect on the RVD response of isolated bovine articular chondrocytes.  相似文献   

10.
After osmotic swelling, cell volume is regulated by a process called regulatory volume decrease (RVD). Although actin cytoskeletons are known to play a regulatory role in RVD, it is not clear how actin‐binding proteins are involved in the RVD process. In the present study, an involvement of an actin‐binding protein, α‐actinin‐4 (ACTN4), in RVD was examined in human epithelial HEK293T cells. Overexpression of ACTN4 significantly facilitated RVD, whereas siRNA‐mediated downregulation of endogenous ACTN4 suppressed RVD. When the cells were subjected to hypotonic stress, the content of ACTN4 increased in a 100,000 × g pellet, which was sensitive to cytochalasin D pretreatment. Protein overlay assays revealed that ABCF2, a cytosolic member of the ABC transporter superfamily, is a binding partner of ACTN4. The ACTN4‐ABCF2 interaction was markedly enhanced by hypotonic stimulation and required the NH2‐terminal region of ABCF2. Overexpression of ABCF2 suppressed RVD, whereas downregulation of ABCF2 facilitated RVD. We then tested whether ABCF2 has a suppressive effect on the activity of volume‐sensitive outwardly rectifying anion channel (VSOR), which is known to mediate Cl? efflux involved in RVD, because another ABC transporter member, CFTR, was shown to suppress VSOR activity. Whole‐cell VSOR currents were largely reduced by overexpression of ABCF2 and markedly enhanced by siRNA‐mediated depletion of ABCF2. Thus, the present study indicates that ACTN4 acts as an enhancer of RVD, whereas ABCF2 acts as a suppressor of VSOR and RVD, and suggests that a swelling‐induced interaction between ACTN4 and ABCF2 prevents ABCF2 from suppressing VSOR activity in the human epithelial cells. J. Cell. Physiol. 227: 3498–3510, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Müller cells are mainly involved in controlling extracellular homeostasis in the retina, where intense neural activity alters ion concentrations and osmotic gradients, thus favoring cell swelling. This increase in cell volume is followed by a regulatory volume decrease response (RVD), which is known to be partially mediated by the activation of K+ and anion channels. However, the precise mechanisms underlying osmotic swelling and subsequent cell volume regulation in Müller cells have been evaluated by only a few studies. Although the activation of ion channels during the RVD response may alter transmembrane potential (Vm), no studies have actually addressed this issue in Müller cells. The aim of the present work is to evaluate RVD using a retinal Müller cell line (MIO-M1) under different extracellular ionic conditions, and to study a possible association between RVD and changes in Vm. Cell volume and Vm changes were evaluated using fluorescent probe techniques and a mathematical model. Results show that cell swelling and subsequent RVD were accompanied by Vm depolarization followed by repolarization. This response depended on the composition of extracellular media. Cells exposed to a hypoosmotic solution with reduced ionic strength underwent maximum RVD and had a larger repolarization. Both of these responses were reduced by K+ or Cl channel blockers. In contrast, cells facing a hypoosmotic solution with the same ionic strength as the isoosmotic solution showed a lower RVD and a smaller repolarization and were not affected by blockers. Together, experimental and simulated data led us to propose that the efficiency of the RVD process in Müller glia depends not only on the activation of ion channels, but is also strongly modulated by concurrent changes in the membrane potential. The relationship between ionic fluxes, changes in ion permeabilities and ion concentrations –all leading to changes in Vm– define the success of RVD.  相似文献   

12.
This study describes the correlation between cell swelling-induced K+ efflux and volume regulation efficiency evaluated with agents known to modulate ion channel activity and/or intracellular signaling processes in a human bronchial epithelial cell line, 16HBE14o−1. Cells on permeable filter supports, differentiated into polarized monolayers, were monitored continuously at room temperature for changes in cell height (Tc), as an index of cell volume, whereas 86Rb efflux was assessed for K+ channel activity. The sudden reduction in osmolality of both the apical and basolateral perfusates (from 290 to 170 mosmol/kg H2O) evoked a rapid increase in cell volume by 35%. Subsequently, the regulatory volume decrease (RVD) restored cell volume almost completely (to 94% of the isosmotic value). The basolateral 86Rb efflux markedly increased during the hyposmotic shock, from 0.50 ± 0.03 min−1 to a peak value of 6.32 ± 0.07 min−1, while apical 86Rb efflux was negligible. Channel blockers, such as GdCl3 (0.5 mM), quinine (0.5 mM) and 5-nitro-2-(3-phenyl-propylamino) benzoic acid (NPPB, 100 μM), abolished the RVD. The protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors tyrphostin 23 (100 μM) and genistein (150 μM) attenuated the RVD. All agents decreased variably the hyposmosis-induced elevation in 86Rb efflux, whereas NPPB induced a complete block, suggesting a link between basolateral K+ and Cl−1 efflux. Forskolin-mediated activation of adenylyl cyclase stimulated the RVD with a concomitant increase in basolateral 86Rb efflux. These data suggest that the basolateral extrusion of K+ and Cl−1 from 16HBE14o−1 cells in response to cell swelling determines RVD efficiency.  相似文献   

13.
The response of isolated hepatocytes of Sparus aurata to hypotonic shock was studied by the aid of videometric and light scattering methods. The isolated cells exposed to a rapid change (from 370 to 260 mOsm/kg) of the osmolarity of the bathing solution swelled but thereafter underwent a decrease of cell volume tending to recovery the original size. This homeostatic response RVD (regulatory volume decrease) was inhibited in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ and in the presence of TMB8, an inhibitor of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores. It is likely that Ca2+ entry through verapamil sensitive Ca2+-channels, probably leading to a release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores, is responsible for RVD since the blocker impaired the ability of the cell to recover its volume after the hypotonic shock. RVD tests performed in the presence of various inhibitors of different transport mechanisms, such as BaCl2, quinine, glybenclamide and bumetanide as well as in the presence of a KCl activator, NEM, led us to suggest that the recovery of cell volume in hypotonic solution is accomplished by an efflux of K+ and Cl? through conductive pathways paralleled by the operation of the KCl cotransport, followed by an obliged water efflux from the cells.  相似文献   

14.
In trout hepatocytes, hypotonic swelling is followed by a compensatory shrinkage called regulatory volume decrease (RVD). It has been postulated that extracellular ATP and other nucleotides may interact with type 2 receptors (P(2)) to modulate this response. In addition, specific ectoenzymes hydrolyze ATP sequentially down to adenosine, which may bind to type 1 receptors (P(1)) and also influence RVD. Accordingly, in this study, we assessed the role of extracellular nucleoside 5'-tri- and diphosphates and of adenosine on RVD of trout hepatocytes. The extent of RVD after 40 min of maximum swelling was denoted as RVD(40), whereas the initial rate of RVD was called v(RVD). In the presence of hypotonic medium (60% of isotonic), hepatocytes swelled 1.6 times followed by v(RVD) of 1.7 min(-1) and RVD(40) of 60.2%. ATP, UTP, UDP, or ATPgammaS (P(2) agonists; 5 microM) increased v(RVD) 1.5-2 times, whereas no changes were observed in the values of RVD(40). Addition of 100 microM suramin or cibacron blue (P(2) antagonists) to the hypotonic medium produced no effect on v(RVD) but a 53-58% inhibition of RVD(40). Incubation of hepatocytes in the presence of either 5 microM [gamma-(32)P]ATP or [alpha-(32)P]ATP induced the extracellular release of [gamma-(32)P]P(i) (0.21 nmol.10(-6) cells(-1).min(-1)) and [alpha-(32)P]P(i) ( approximately 8 x 10(-3) nmol.10(-6) cells(-1).min(-1)), suggesting the presence of ectoenzymes capable of fully dephosphorylating ATP. Concerning the effect of P(1) activation on RVD, 5 microM adenosine, both in the presence and absence of 100 microM S-(4-nitrobenzil)-6-tioinosine (a blocker of adenosine uptake), decreased RVD(40) by 37-44%, whereas 8-phenyl theophylline, a P(1) antagonist, increased RVD(40) by 15%. Overall, results indicate that ATP, UTP, and UDP, acting via P(2), are important factors promoting RVD of trout hepatocytes, whereas adenosine binding to P(1) inhibits this process.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of volume regulation in hypotonic media was analysed in human peripheral blood mononuclear (PBM) cells. Electronic cell sizing showed that hypotonic swelling is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) phase. This was confirmed by both electron microscopy and by cellular water determinations. The rate of regulatory shrinking was proportional to the degree of hypotonicity in the 0.5–0.9 X isotonic range. Cell viability was only marginally affected in this range. The content of cellular K+ decreased during RVD, while Na+ content remained unchanged. Similarly, the efflux of 86Rb (used as a K+ analog) increased upon dilution, whereas 22Na efflux was not altered. 86Rb uptake was enhanced by hypotonic stress and both ouabain-sensitive and -insensitive components were affected. A ouabain-sensitive stimulation was also seen in Na+- free media. Ouabain partially inhibited RVD only if added to the cells hours before hypotonic challenge. A normal shrinking response was observed in K+-free media, and also in Na+-free media when Li+, choline+, or Tris+ were the substitutes. In high K+ or Rb+ hypotonic media shrinking was absent and a second swelling phase was observed. Cs+ displayed an intermediate behavior, with shrinking observed at lower dilutions and secondary swelling at higher ones. The direction and magnitude of the response also changed when the external K+ concentration was varied and, with 50 mM K+, no regulatory volume change occurred following hypotonic stress. These findings suggest that RVD occurs largely by a passive loss of cellular K+, resulting from a selective increase in permeability to this ion. In addition, the (Na-K) pump appears to be activated upon cell swelling by a mechanism other than Na+ entry into the cell, but this activation is not essential for RVD.  相似文献   

16.
In most animal cells, hypotonic swelling is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) thought to prevent cell death. In contrast, goldfish hepatocytes challenged with hypotonic medium (180 mosM, HYPO) increase their volume 1.7 times but remain swollen and viable for at least 5 h. Incubation with ATPgammaS (an ATP analog) in HYPO triggers a 42% volume decrease. This effect is concentration dependent (K(1/2) = 760 nM) and partially abolished by P2 receptor antagonists (64% inhibition). A similar induction of RVD is observed with ATP, UTP, and UDP, whereas adenosine inhibits RVD. Goldfish hepatocytes release more than 500 nM ATP during the first minutes of HYPO with no induction of RVD. The fact that similar concentrations of ATPgammaS did trigger RVD could be explained by showing that ATPgammaS induced ATP release. Finally, we observed that in a very small extracellular volume, hepatocytes do show a 56% RVD. This response was diminished by P2 receptor antagonists (73%) and increased (73%) when the extracellular ATP hydrolysis was inhibited 72%. Using a mathematical model, we predict that during the first 2 min of HYPO exposure the extracellular [ATP] is mainly governed by ATP diffusion and by both nonlytic and lytic ATP release, with almost no contribution from ecto-ATPase activity. We show that goldfish hepatocytes under standard HYPO (large volume) do not display RVD unless this is triggered by the addition of micromolar concentrations of nucleotides. However, under very low assay volumes, sufficient endogenous extracellular [ATP] can build up to induce RVD.  相似文献   

17.
We studied the relationship between changes in intracellular pH (pH i ), intracellular Ca2+([Ca2+] i ) and charybdotoxin sensitive (CTX) maxi-K+ channels occurring after modest `physiological' swelling in guinea pig jejunal villus enterocytes. Villus cell volume was assessed by electronic cell sizing, and pH i and [Ca2+] i by fluorescence spectroscopy with 2,7, biscarboxyethyl-5-6-carboxyfluorescein and Indo-1, respectively. In a slightly (0.93 × isotonic) hypotonic medium, villus cells swelled to the same size they would reach during d-glucose or l-alanine absorption; the subsequent Regulatory Volume Decrease (RVD) was prevented by CTX. After the large volume increase in a more hypotonic (0.80 × isotonic) medium, RVD was unaffected by CTX. After modest swelling associated with 0.93 × isotonic dilution, the pH i alkalinized but N-5-methyl-isobutyl amiloride (MIA) prevented this ΔpH i and the subsequent RVD. Even in the presence of MIA, alkalinization with added NH4Cl permitted complete RVD which could be inhibited by CTX. The rate of 86Rb efflux which also increased after this 0.93 × isotonic dilution was inhibited an equivalent amount by CTX, MIA or Na+-free medium. Modest swelling transiently increased [Ca2+] i and Ca2+-free medium or blocking alkalinization by MIA or Na+-free medium diminished this transient increase an equivalent amount. RVD after modest swelling was prevented in Ca2+-free medium but alkalinization still occurred. After large volume increases, alkalinization of cells increased [Ca2+] i and volume changes became sensitive to CTX. We conclude that both alkalinization of pH i and increased [Ca2+] i observed with `physiological' volume increase are essential for the activation of CTX-sensitive maxi-K+ channels required for RVD. Received: 30 March 1999/Revised: 6 July 1999  相似文献   

18.
A decrease in external osmolarity results in cell swelling and the immediate activation of a mechanism to restore cell volume, known as regulatory volume decrease (RVD). When exposed to a gradual osmolarity decrease (GODE), some cells do not swell. This reflects the operation of an active regulatory process known as isovolumetric regulation (IVR). The mechanisms underlying IVR appear similar to those activated during RVD, namely the extrusion of K+, Cl-, amino acids, and other organic molecules. A previous study has documented IVR in cerebellar granule neurons, parallel to an early efflux of taurine and Cl-, whereas K+ efflux is delayed. In this work we briefly review the importance of amino acids in the mechanisms of cell volume control in the brain, with emphasis on IVR. We also present experiments showing the response to GODE in cerebellar astrocytes. The currents activated during GODE, recorded in the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique, indicate the early activation of an anion current, followed by a more delayed cation current. A correlation between the time course of amino acid efflux during GODE and the occurrence or not of IVR in various cell types, suggest the importance of these osmolytes in the volume regulatory process in this model.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases has been reported to occur after a hypo-osmotic cell swelling in various types of cells. In renal epithelial A6 cells, the hypo-osmotic shock induced a rapid increase in the phosphorylation of an extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-like protein that was maximal 10 min after osmotic stress. Activation of ERK was significantly increased when hypo-osmotic stress was performed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, a condition that inhibits regulatory volume decrease (RVD). Exposure of cells to PD98059, an inhibitor of the MAP kinase kinase MEK, at a concentration that fully cancelled ERK activation, did not inhibit RVD. On the contrary, RVD was abolished when osmotic shock was induced in the presence of SB203580, an inhibitor of stress-activated protein kinases (SAPKs). These results suggest that different MAP kinases are activated after hypo-osmotic stress in A6 cells. SAPKs would be involved in the control of RVD, while ERK would lead to later events, such as gene expression or energy metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
This study describes the correlation between cell swelling-induced K+ efflux and volume regulation efficiency evaluated with agents known to modulate ion channel activity and/or intracellular signaling processes in a human bronchial epithelial cell line, 16HBE14o(-1). Cells on permeable filter supports, differentiated into polarized monolayers, were monitored continuously at room temperature for changes in cell height (T(c)), as an index of cell volume, whereas (86)Rb efflux was assessed for K+ channel activity. The sudden reduction in osmolality of both the apical and basolateral perfusates (from 290 to 170 mosmol/kg H(2)O) evoked a rapid increase in cell volume by 35%. Subsequently, the regulatory volume decrease (RVD) restored cell volume almost completely (to 94% of the isosmotic value). The basolateral (86)Rb efflux markedly increased during the hyposmotic shock, from 0.50 +/- 0.03 min(-1) to a peak value of 6.32 +/- 0.07 min(-1), while apical (86)Rb efflux was negligible. Channel blockers, such as GdCl(3) (0.5 mM), quinine (0.5 mM) and 5-nitro-2-(3-phenyl-propylamino) benzoic acid (NPPB, 100 microM), abolished the RVD. The protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors tyrphostin 23 (100 microM) and genistein (150 microM) attenuated the RVD. All agents decreased variably the hyposmosis-induced elevation in (86)Rb efflux, whereas NPPB induced a complete block, suggesting a link between basolateral K(+) and Cl(-1) efflux. Forskolin-mediated activation of adenylyl cyclase stimulated the RVD with a concomitant increase in basolateral (86)Rb efflux. These data suggest that the basolateral extrusion of K+ and Cl(-1) from 16HBE14o(-1) cells in response to cell swelling determines RVD efficiency.  相似文献   

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