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1.
As a metallochromic indicator for ionized calcium, arsenazo III is approximately 50 times more sensitive than murexide. However, because of the high binding constant for calcium, the following problems may occur: (a) a considerable amount of calcium is bound to arsenazo III, thereby causing an error in estimating the concentration of ionized calcium; (b) the amount of bound calcium varies with the concentrations of calcium, arsenazo III, magnesium ion and monovalent cations; (c) the amount also varies with pH, (d) the relationship between the absorbance change and the concentration of ionized calcium is nonlinear; and (e) the binding constant of arsenazo III for calcium cannot be determined by the conventional double reciprocal plot. A new experimental and theoretical method is presented which copes with these problems.  相似文献   

2.
Arsenazo III forms a 1:1 complex with calcium. The affinity constant of arsenazo III for calcium (pKCa) has been determined by titrating purified arsenazo III with standard calcium solutions. The method of evaluation used allows one to determine correct pKCa values even in the presence of micromolar amounts of contaminating calcium. The pKCa is influenced by the following factors: (a) in the neutral pH range the apparent pKCa increases strongly with pH; (b) alkali ions bind weakly to arsenazo III and millimolar concentrations cause a decrease in the apparent pKCa; (c) the magnesium affinity of arsenazo III, although much lower than the calcium affinity, increases strongly with pH in the neutral range (at pH 7.0 the calcium affinity of arsenazo III is not appreciably altered by up to 2 mm magnesium); (d) strontium and barium form weaker complexes with arsenazo III than calcium, but much stronger complexes than magnesium; (e) the apparent pKCa decreases with increasing buffer concentration in the millimolar range. The pKCa of arsenazo III is so high that, unless the arsenazo III concentration greatly exceeds the calcium concentration, a considerable fraction of the total arsenazo III is in the calcium complexed form. Because of this, arsenazo III responds nonlinearly to all but the lowest calcium concentrations; however, quantitation of the calcium concentration can readily be done from the mass action law provided that the pKCa is determined under the actual experimental conditions. Arsenazo III is a reliable calcium indicator if the experimental conditions, particularly pH, are well controlled.  相似文献   

3.
The Ca2+ indicator, arsenazo III, binds to subcellular fractions of rabbit skeletal muscle with sufficient affinity that in living muscle containing 1–2 mM arsenazo III, the estimated free arsenazo III concentration is only 50–200 μM; 80–90% of the bound arsenazo III is associated with soluble proteins.The binding of arsenazo III to soluble proteins decreases the optical response of the dye to Ca2+; this is due to a decrease in the affinity of the protein-bound dye for Ca2+. Approximately half of the bound arsenazo III is released from the particulate fraction and soluble proteins upon addition of 5 mM Ca2+, suggesting that the Ca-arsenazo complex has lower affinity for the protein binding sites than the free dye.The Ca2+ binding to the soluble protein fraction of rabbit skeletal muscle is attributable largely to its parvalbumin content.  相似文献   

4.
Stoichiometries of arsenazo III-Ca complexes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The equilibrium interactions of the metallochromic indicator arsenazo III with calcium at physiological ionic strength and pH were investigated spectrophotometrically and with the aid of a calcium electrode. Evidence suggests the formation of more than one dye-calcium complex. The analysis of data obtained over a 10,000-fold range of dye concentrations concludes that at the concentrations used for in vitro biochemical studies (10--100 microM), arsenazo III absorbance changes in response to calcium binding primarily involve the formation of a complex involving two dye molecules and two calcium ions. At millimolar dye concentrations, typical of physiological calcium transient determinations in situ, a second complex involving two arsenazo III molecules and one calcium ion is additionally formed. A third complex, involving one arsenazo III molecule and one calcium ion, is formed at very low dye concentrations. The results reported here suggest that equilibrium calibration of the dye with calcium cannot be used directly to satisfactorily relate transient absorbance changes in physiological preparations to calcium concentration changes since several stoichiometrically distinct complexes with different absorbances could be formed at different rates. The results of this study do not permit the elucidation of a unique kinetic scheme of arsenazo III complexation with calcium; for this, in vitro kinetic analysis is required. Results of similar analysis of the dye interaction with magnesium are also reported, and these appear compatible with a much simpler model of complexation.  相似文献   

5.
The absorption spectrum of arsenazo III in media containing K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+ is sharply influenced by pH in the range of 7.5–5.0. The effect of pH is particularly pronounced in the wavelength range 532–602 nm due to the large pH dependence of the dissociation constant of Mg-arsenazo III complex. Therefore absorption changes at these wavelengths during muscle contraction cannot be used as reliable indicators of free ionized Ca2+ concentration in the cell. The effect of pH is less pronounced, but still noticeable at the wavelength pairs 575–650 or 660–685 nm.Multiple layers of muscle cells grown on polystyrene coils permit measurement of absorption changes of arsenazo III, introduced into the cells, by equilibration with 0.5 nM arsenazo III under routine culture conditions. The absorbance changes recorded at 660–685 nm are probably related to changes in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

6.
The absorption spectrum of arsenazo III in media containing K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+ is sharply influenced by pH in the range of 7.5--5.0. The effect of pH is particularly pronounced in the wavelength range 532--602 nm due to the large pH dependence of the dissociation constant of Mg-arsenazo III complex. Therefore absorption changes at these wavelengths during muscle contraction cannot be used as reliable indicators of free ionized Ca2+ concentration in the cell. The effect of pH is less pronounced, but still noticeable at the wavelength pairs 575--650 or 660--685 nm. Multiple layers of muscle cells grown on polystyrene coils permit measurement of absorption changes of arsenazo III, introduced into the cells, by equilibration with 0.5 mM arsenazo III under routine culture conditions. The absorbance changes recorded at 660--685 nm are probably related to changes in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

7.
Continuous nondestructive monitoring of intracellular ionized calcium in isolated squid axons by differential absorption spectroscopy (using arsenazo III and antipyrylazo III) was used to study uptake of calcium by carbonyl cyanide, p-trifluoromethoxy-phenylhydrazone (FCCP)- and (or) cyanide (CN)-sensitive and insensitive constituents of axoplasm. Known calcium loads imposed on the axon by stimulation produced proportional increments of free axoplasmic calcium. Measurement of increments in ionized calcium as a function of load confirmed earlier reports of buffering in normal and FCCP- and (or) CN-poisoned axons. Measurement of rates of calcium uptake by presumed mitochondria showed little uptake at ambient Ca below 200--400 nM, with sigmoidal rise to about 20--30 mumol/kg axoplasm per min (calculated to be about 200 mmol/kg mitochondrial protein per min) at 50 micrometer, indicating a functional threshold for presumed mitochondrial uptake well above physiological ionized calcium concentration. Treatment of stimulated axons with cyanide, to release calcium from presumed mitochondria, showed that the sensitivity to cyanide decreased progressively with time after stimulation (t 1/2 = 3--10 min) implying transfer of sequestered calcium into a less metabolically labile form.  相似文献   

8.
At calcium concentrations up to about 4 mM a selective permeability increase of cardiolipin/dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (50:50, mol%) membranes for calcium and its chelator arsenazo III is observed. Under these conditions calcium does not occupy all the binding sites of cardiolipin at the membrane interface and no vesicle-vesicle interactions are found. Lowering of the cardiolipin content of the vesicles to 20 mol% extends the calcium concentration range in which a selective permeability for calcium and arsenazo III is appearing up to about 12 mM. We suggest that the observed selective permeability increase is caused by transient formation of inverted micellar structures in the membrane with cardiolipin as translocating membrane component for calcium and arsenazo III. At calcium concentrations of 4 mM and higher for 50 mol% cardiolipin-containing vesicles a general permeability increase is found together with calcium-cardiolipin binding in a 1:1 stoichiometry, vesicles aggregation and, above 8 mM of calcium, vesicle fusion. The loss of barrier function of the membrane under these conditions is correlated with vesicle aggregation and may be explained by a transition from a bilayer into a hexagonal HII organization of the phospholipids.  相似文献   

9.
Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) play a key role in the generalization and spreading of calcium waves in excitable cells; however, the question of the existence of functionally active RyRs in nonexcitable cells demonstrating the capacity for exocytosis (e.g., salivary gland acini) remains open. We studied changes in the total amount of calcium stored in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of acinar cells of the submandibular salivary gland of rats and changes in the concentration of ionized Ca2+ inside the ER ([Ca2+]ER) using, respectively, a metallochrome dye, arsenazo III, and a low-affinity fluorescent dye, mag-fura 2/AM. In permeabilized cells, caffeine caused dose-dependent decreases in the total amount of calcium and concentration of ionized calcium. The effective concentration of caffeine providing a 50% drop in the [Ca2+]ER (EC50) was, on average, 7.3 ± 1.1 mM. The caffeine-induced drop in the [Ca2+]ER was insensitive to heparin; in addition, it was blocked by high concentrations (100 μM) of ryanodine, potentiated by ryanodine applied in mild concentrations (10 μM), and also demonstrated a bell-shaped dependence on the concentration of cytoplasmic Ca2+. Such peculiarities are typical characteristics of the RyR-mediated reaction. Therefore, functional RyRs whose activation results in a transient release of calcium from the ER are present in acinar cells of the submandibular salivary gland. Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 39, No. 2, pp. 107–112, March–April, 2007.  相似文献   

10.
At a concentration much lower than that usually employed for measuring cytosolic ionized Ca2+ concentrations, arsenazo III underwent a one-electron reduction by rat liver cytosolic fraction or a hypoxanthinexanthine oxidase system to produce an azo anion radical metabolite. NADH, NADPH, N1-methylnicotinamide, hypoxanthine, and xanthine, in that order, could serve as a source of reducing equivalents for the production of this free radical by the cytosolic fraction. The steady-state concentration of the azo anion radical and the arsenazo III-stimulated O2 consumption were enhanced by calcium and magnesium. Antipyrylazo III was ineffective in increasing O2 consumption by rat liver cytosolic fraction and gave a much weaker ESR signal of an azo anion radical with both the liver cytosolic fraction, in the presence of NADH, and the hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase system.  相似文献   

11.
The Ca indicator arsenazo III was introduced into cut frog twitch fibers by diffusion from end-pool segments rendered permeable by saponin. After 2-3 h, the arsenazo III concentration at the optical recording site in the center of a fiber reached two to three times that in the end-pool solutions. Thus, arsenazo III was bound to or taken up by intracellular constituents. The time course of indicator appearance was fitted by equations for diffusion plus linear reversible binding; on average, 0.73 of the indicator was bound and the free diffusion constant was 0.86 x 10(-6) cm2/s at 18 degrees C. When the indicator was removed from the end pools, it failed to diffuse away from the optical site as rapidly as it had diffused in. The wavelength dependence of resting arsenazo III absorbance was the same in cut fibers and injected intact fibers. After action potential stimulation, the active Ca and dichroic signals were similar in the two preparations, which indicates that arsenazo III undergoes the same changes in absorbance and orientation in both cut and intact fibers. Ca transients in freshly prepared cut fibers appeared to be similar to those in intact fibers. As a cut fiber experiment progressed, however, the Ca signal changed. With action potential stimulation, the half-width of the signal gradually increased, regardless of whether the indicator concentration was increasing or decreasing. This increase was usually not accompanied by any change in the amplitude of the Ca signal at a given indicator concentration or by any obvious deterioration in the electrical condition of the fiber. In voltage-clamp experiments near threshold, the relation between peak [Ca] and voltage usually became less steep with time and shifted to more negative potentials. All these changes were also observed in cut fibers containing antipyrylazo III (Maylie, J., M. Irving, N. L. Sizto, and W. K. Chandler. 1987. Journal of General Physiology. 89:83-143). They are considered to represent a progressive change in the physiological state of a cut fiber during the time course of an experiment.  相似文献   

12.
The light-induced membrane voltage response (receptor potential, ReP) and the absorption change of the intracellularly injected calcium indicator arsenazo III (arsenazo response) were recorded simultaneously in Limulus ventral nerve photoreceptor cells. A double pulse technique was applied for stimulation. After pressure injection of the indicator into the cell absorption changes were measured at 646 nm to obtain a measure of the changes of the intracellular calcium ion concentration.
  1. The size of the arsenazo response increases with increasing intensity of the light stimulus. The intensity dependence of the size of the arsenazo response δAmax shows almost no correlate with the peak amplitude of the ReP, but correlates rather well with the time integral of the ReP.
  2. Decreasing light adaptation (caused by prolongation of the repetition time of the pulse pairs) leads to an increase in size of the arsenazo response. Also here δAmax correlates better with the time integral of the ReP than with its peak amplitude.
  3. Lowering the calcium concentration in the superfusate (from 10 mmol/l to ca. 40 Μmol/l) causes after ca. 10 min a drastical diminution of the arsenazo response to values below the noise level, and a less marked reduction in size of the ReP. The falling phase of the ReP is slower. After return to normal calcium concentration the arsenazo response recovers partly in ca. 50 min, while the ReP recovers faster.
The results show two opposite correlations between ReP and arsenazo response: Increase in size and duration of the ReP causes a greater transient increase of the intracellular calcium ion concentration. This in turn tends to reduce and shorten the ReP. Which effect dominates obviously depends on the conditions of the experiment: when the calcium concentration in the superfusate is reduced to ca. 40 Μmol/l a slow decrease of the ReP is accompanied by a small increase of the intracellular calcium ion concentration.  相似文献   

13.
A Ca-sensitive dye, arsenazo III, has been incorporated into resealed human erythrocyte ghosts and calibrated to monitor continuously micromolar concentrations of intracellular ionized Ca ([Ca++]i). When the external concentration of Ca is much greater than [Ca++]i, [Ca++]i increases because of a net balance between Ca influx and efflux. Dynamic changes in [Ca++]i regulate K efflux, which in turn may influence the rate of Ca influx. A procedure for purifying arsenazo III is also described.  相似文献   

14.
The underlying principles of binding equilibria of arsenazo III with Ca2+ and Mg2+ are presented. Ca2+ and Mg2+ can bind arsenazo III in several different protonated forms depending on pH. The binding affinities of these different protonated forms of arsenazo III with Ca2+ increase in the order of H4A4- <H3A5- >H2A6- and with Mg2+, H4A4- > H3A5- > H2A6-. Arsenazo III is not membrane bound. The sensitivity ratio of arsenazo III with Ca2+ to arsenazo III with Mg2+ is close to two orders of magnitude. Arsenazo III and its complexes are extremely sensitive to pH changes. With 5 μM arsenazo III, the minimum detectable amount of Ca2+ can be as low as 0.08 μM. Contrary to current belief, we found that Mg2+ can bind to arsenazo III in a slightly acidic medium. Potential applications of arsenazo III to the study of membrane Ca2+ transport are also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum was investigated in voltage-clamped, tetrodotoxin-treated frog skeletal muscle fibres injected with arsenazo III. Short (5 ms) depolarizing pulses (test pulses) produced a transient change in arsenazo III absorption, signalling an increase in intracellular calcium in concentration (calcium transient). Conditioning subthreshold depolarizations, which preceded the test pulse, potentiated the calcium transient triggered by the test pulse. Conditioning hyperpolarizations, applied either before or after the test pulse, inhibited the calcium transient. These effects of conditioning polarizations on the calcium transient may explain similar effects of subthreshold polarizations on muscle contraction that have previously been reported. The potentiating effect of subthreshold depolarizations was observed only when the test pulse was short (5 ms). The potentiating effect develops at -48 mV with a time constant of about 7 ms at 6.5 degrees C; this seems to be slower than that predicted by the potential spread from the surface along the tubular system. Thus, part of the effect could arise from the coupling process between tubular depolarization and calcium release.  相似文献   

16.
The permeabilization-resealing technique [Al-Nasser & Crompton, Biochem. J. (1986) 239, 19-29] has been applied to the entrapment of arsenazo III in the matrix compartment of rat liver mitochondria. The addition of 10 mM-arsenazo III to mitochondria permeabilized with Ca2+ partially restores the inner-membrane potential (delta psi) and leads to the recovery of 3.9 nmol of arsenazo III/mg of protein in the matrix when the mitochondria are washed three times. The recovery of entrapped arsenazo III is increased 2-fold by 4 mM-Mg2+, which also promotes repolarization. ATP with or without Mg2+ decreased arsenazo III recovery. Under all conditions, less arsenazo III than [14C]sucrose is entrapped, in particular in the presence of ATP. The amount of arsenazo III entrapped is proportional to the concentration of arsenazo III used as resealant, and is equally distributed between heavy and light mitochondria. Arsenazo III-loaded permeabilized and resealed (PR) mitochondria develop delta psi values of 141 +/- 3 mV. PR mitochondria retain arsenazo III and [14C]sucrose for more than 2 h at 0 degrees C. At 25 degrees C, and in the presence of Ruthenium Red, PR mitochondria lose arsenazo III and [14C]sucrose at equal rates, but Ca2+ efflux is more rapid; this indicates that Ca2+ is released by an Na+-independent carrier in addition to permeabilization. The Na+/Ca2+ carrier of PR mitochondria is partially (60%) inhibited by extramitochondrial free Ca2+ stabilized with Ca2+ buffers; maximal inhibition is attained with 2 microM free Ca2+. A similar inhibition occurs in normal mitochondria with 3.5 nmol of matrix Ca2+/mg of protein, but the inhibition is decreased by increased matrix Ca2+. The data suggest the presence of Ca2+ regulatory sites on the Na+/Ca2+ carrier that change the affinity for matrix free Ca2+.  相似文献   

17.
By applying flash-spectrophotometry with the calcium-indicating dye arsenazo III rapid light-triggered calcium release in various cattle rod outer segment preparations was studied. It is shown that light-induced calcium signals can be unambiguously discriminated from underlying absorption changes due to photolysis of rhodopsin and apparent absorption changes resulting from lightscattering transients. The following results have been obtained: 1. Calcium-induced arsenazo III responses can be quantitatively and kinetically resolved within the time domain of the visual transduction process. 2. Photoexcitation of rhodopsin results in calcium release from intradiscal binding sites. 3. Calcium released does not appear in the cytoplasmic space unless the disc membrane is made permeable to calcium ions by an ionophore. 4. The shortest observed half-rise time of calcium release (300 ms) is possibly limited by the ionophore. 5. The stoichiometric ratio of calcium released/rhodopsin bleached is 0.5 at a free calcium concentration of 2 microM. The amount of calcium released is proportional to the precentage of rhodopsin bleaching (from 1--10%). 6. Upon disruption of the disc stack by lysis of intact rod outer segments the light-induced calcium release is greatly altered. The results are discussed in relation to previous reports on a light-induced calcium release from retinal discs and in terms of the proposed role of calcium as an intracellular transmitter in vertebrate photoreceptors.  相似文献   

18.
Vanadate binding to different sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane preparations was determined by measuring bound vanadate colorimetrically and by phosphorylating the vanadate-free enzyme fraction with [gamma-32P] ATP. Colorimetry allowed the study of the dependence of equilibrium vanadate binding on ionized magnesium and the displacing effect of ionized calcium at vanadate concentrations greater than 0.1 mM only. At saturating magnesium concentration the enzyme binds 6-8 nmol vanadate/mg protein and half-maximum saturation is reached at 40 microM. Vanadate is displaced from the enzyme when its high-affinity calcium-binding sites are saturated and conversely calcium is solely displaced from its high-affinity binding sites by vanadate. The phosphorylation procedure allowed the measurement of equilibrium binding as well as the kinetics of vanadate binding and release at vanadate concentrations below 0.1 mM. Half-times of 30s and 3s were observed for vanadate release induced by 0.1 mM and 1 mM calcium respectively. Millimolar concentrations of ATP are required for vanadate displacement. Under equilibrium conditions the enzyme displays an affinity for vanadate of 1.6 X 10(6) M-1. The dependence on the concentration of vanadate of the rate of vanadate binding yielded an affinity of only 1 X 10(4) M-1. Closed vesicles bind vanadate much more slowly than calcium-permeable preparations. The initial rate of calcium-induced vanadate dissociation is accelerated considerably when the vesicles are made calcium permeable. The rate of vanadate dissociation from calcium-permeable vesicles reaches half-maximum values at 1-2 mM calcium indicating that the internal low-affinity calcium-binding sites must first be occupied in order to release bound vanadate. The results suggest that vanadate binding leads to a transition of the external high to internal low-affinity calcium-binding sites.  相似文献   

19.
At the concentrations usually employed as a Ca2+ indicator, arsenazo III underwent a one-electron reduction by rat liver mitochondria to produce an azo anion radical as demonstrated by electron-spin resonance spectroscopy. Either NADH or NADPH could serve as a source of reducing equivalents for the production of this free radical by intact rat liver mitochondria. Under aerobic conditions, addition of arsenazo III to rat liver mitochondria produced an increase in electron flow from NAD(P)H to molecular oxygen, generating superoxide anion. NAD(P)H generated from endogenous mitochondrial NAD(P)+ by intramitochondrial reactions could not be used for the NAD(P)H azoreductase reaction unless the mitochondria were solubilized by detergent or anaerobiosis. In addition, NAD(P)H azoreductase activity was higher in the crude outer mitochondrial membrane fraction than in mitoplasts and intact mitochondria. The steady-state concentration of the azo anion radical and the arsenazo III-stimulated cyanide-insensitive oxygen consumption were enhanced by calcium and magnesium, suggesting that, in addition to an enhanced azo anion radical-stabilization by complexation with the metal ions, enhanced reduction of arsenazo III also occurred. Accordingly, addition of cations to crude outer mitochondrial membrane preparations increased arsenazo III-stimulated cyanide-insensitive O2 consumption, H2O2 formation, and NAD(P)H oxidation. Antipyrylazo III was much less effective than arsenazo III in increasing superoxide anion formation by rat liver mitochondria and gave a much weaker electron spin resonance spectrum of an azo anion radical. These results provide direct evidence of an azoreductase activity associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane and of a stimulation of arsenazo III reduction by cations.  相似文献   

20.
Examples are presented of the interaction between cell organelles and metallochromic indicators used in the measurement of ionized Ca2+. Sarcoplasmic reticulum was found to sequester murexide type indicators along with Ca2+ in the presence of ATP, but not to sequester arsenazo III and antipyrylazo III. The presence of a permeable anion suppresses the sequestration of murexide type indicators by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In the presence of ruthenium red, both rat liver and beef heart mitochondria release sequestered Ca2+ with arsenazo III, but not with murexide.  相似文献   

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