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1.
Studies on Ca2+-channel distribution in maturation arrested mouse oocyte   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The present study was carried out to identify the existence of voltage-dependent Ca2+-channels (P/Q-, N-, and L-type) and their distributional differences in germinal vesicle (GV) and GV breakdown (GVBD)-arrested mouse oocytes which includes GVBD to telophase I of meiosis I and matured oocytes (MII, metaphase of meiosis II) by using the immunocytochemical method and a confocal laser scanning microscope. (1) Comparison between follicular oocytes (GV) and GV-arrested oocytes after 17 hr of in vitro culture. In follicular oocytes, P/Q-, N-, L (anti-alpha1C anti-alpha1D)-type Ca2+-channels showed both localized and uniform staining. In contrast, GV-arrested oocytes, after in vitro culture for 17 hr, showed no presence of Ca2+-channels in most oocytes. (2) Comparison between GVBD oocytes after culture in vitro for 3 hr and GVBD-arrested oocytes after culture in vitro for 17 hr. In GVBD oocytes, P/Q-, N-, L (anti-1C, anti-alpha1D)-type Ca2+-channels showed both localized and uniform staining. In contrast, in GVBD-arrested oocytes, none of the three types of Ca2+-channels were identified in 72-86% of oocytes. The present study demonstrates that in most GVBD-arrested oocytes that do not mature to MII, there is no Ca2+-channel identified. Therefore, most of the GVBD-arrested oocytes seem to have defects in Ca2+-channel expression/translation. Also, distributional changes of Ca2+-channels take place depending on the maturation progress in GV oocytes and MII stage oocytes (ovulated and 17 hr cultured MII stage oocytes). In addition, we found evidence that a functional voltage-dependent Ca2+-channel (L-type) exists in mouse oocytes (ovulated and cultured MII staged oocytes by a confocal laser scanning microscope).  相似文献   

2.
A novel gene (Cacng2; gamma(2)) encoding a protein similar to the voltage-activated Ca(2+) channel gamma(1) subunit was identified as the defective gene in the epileptic and ataxic mouse, stargazer. In this study, we analyzed the association of this novel neuronal gamma(2) subunit with Ca(2+) channels of rabbit brain, and the function of the gamma(2) subunit in recombinant neuronal Ca(2+) channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Our results showed that the gamma(2) subunit and a closely related protein (called gamma(3)) co-sedimented and co-immunoprecipitated with neuronal Ca(2+) channel subunits in vivo. Electrophysiological analyses showed that gamma(2) co-expression caused a significant decrease in the current amplitude of both alpha(1B)(alpha(1)2.2)-class (36.8%) and alpha(1A)(alpha(1)2.1)-class (39.7%) Ca(2+) channels (alpha(1)beta(3)alpha(2)delta). Interestingly, the inhibitory effects of the gamma(2) subunit on current amplitude were dependent on the co-expression of the alpha(2)delta subunit. In addition, co-expression of gamma(2) or gamma(1) also significantly decelerates the activation kinetics of alpha(1B)-class Ca(2+) channels. Taken together, these results suggest that the gamma(2) subunit is an important constituent of the neuronal Ca(2+) channel complex and that it down-regulates neuronal Ca(2+) channel activity. Furthermore, the gamma(2) subunit likely contributes to the fine-tuning of neuronal Ca(2+) channels by counterbalancing the effects of the alpha(2)delta subunit.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of three divalent metal cations (Mn2+, Co2+, and Cu2+) on high-voltage-activated (HVA) Ca2+ currents were studied in acutely dissociated pyramidal neurons of rat piriform cortex using the patch-clamp technique. Cu2+, Mn2+, and Co2+ blocked HVA currents conducted by Ba2+ ( IBa) with IC50 of approximately 920 nM, approximately 58 micro M, and approximately 65 micro M, respectively. Additionally, after application of non-saturating concentrations of the three cations, residual currents activated with substantially slower kinetics than control IBa. As a consequence, the current fraction abolished by the blocking cations typically displayed, in its early phase, an unusually fast-decaying transient. The latter phenomenon turned out to be a subtraction artifact, since none of the pharmacological components (L-, N-, P/Q-, and R-type) that constitute the total HVA currents under study showed a similarly fast early decay: hence, the slow activation kinetics of residual currents was not due to the preferential inhibition of a fast-activating/inactivating component, but rather to a true slowing effect of the blocker cations. The percent IBa-amplitude inhibition caused by Mn2+, Co2+, and Cu2+ was voltage-independent over the whole potential range explored (up to +30 mV), hence the slowing of IBa activation kinetics was not due to a mechanism of voltage- and time-dependent relief from block. Moreover, Mn2+, Co2+, and Cu2+ significantly reduced I(Ba) deactivation speed upon repolarization, which also is not compatible with a depolarization-dependent unblocking mechanism. The above results show that 1) Cu2+ is a particularly potent HVA Ca2+-channel blocker in rat palaeocortical neurons; and 2) Mn2+, Co2+, and Cu2+, besides exerting a blocking action on HVA Ca2+-channels, also modify Ca2+-current activation and deactivation kinetics, most probably by directly interfering with channel-state transitions.  相似文献   

4.
The expression of heterologous mRNA in Xenopus oocytes was quantitatively inhibited by coinjection of single-stranded complementary DNA or synthetic complementary oligonucleotides. The lymphokines Interleukin-2 (IL-2) and Interleukin-3 (IL-3) were used as model systems to test the effectiveness of this procedure. Messenger RNA samples were hybridized to single stranded complementary DNA or oligonucleotides, injected into oocytes and the oocyte incubation medium assayed for the presence or absence of specific translation products 48 hours later. When IL-2 mRNA was hybridized to a large excess of long (490 bases) single stranded complementary DNA, the expression of IL-2 was effectively blocked (greater than 98%). Complementary oligonucleotides (18-23 bases) were almost as effective as the polynucleotide in inhibiting IL-2 activity (greater than 95%). Oligonucleotides derived from the 5' end, middle or 3' end of the coding sequence were all effective in arresting IL-2 mRNA translation. Oligonucleotide hybrid-arrest was effective even when no NaCl was present in the hybridization buffer, indicating that the annealing reaction could occur within the oocyte after injection. Definite proof that hybrid-arrest could occur in vivo was shown by the fact that oligonucleotides injected before or after mRNA injection, while not as effective as co-injection, still showed substantial inhibition of specific mRNA translation. The oligonucleotide hybrid-arrest method was equally effective in the case of IL-3, demonstrating its general applicability.  相似文献   

5.
L-Type calcium channel was expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes injected with RNAs coding for different cardiac Ca2+ channel subunits, or with total heart RNA. The effects of activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by the phorbol ester PMA (4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate) were studied. Currents through channels composed of the main (alpha 1) subunit alone were initially increased and then decreased by PMA. A similar biphasic modulation was observed when the alpha 1 subunit was expressed in combination with alpha 2/delta, beta and/or gamma subunits, and when the channels were expressed following injection of total rat heart RNA. No effects on the voltage dependence of activation were observed. The effects of PMA were blocked by staurosporine, a protein kinase inhibitor. beta subunit moderate the enhancement caused by PMA. We conclude that both enhancement and inhibition of cardiac L-type Ca2+ currents by PKC are mediated via an effect on the alpha 1 subunit, while the beta subunit may play a mild modulatory role.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Expression and membrane localization of an epitope-tagged human Ca(2+) channel alpha(1C) subunit were monitored in Xenopus oocytes by confocal microscopy and electrophysiological recording. When alpha(2)/delta and beta(2a) were separately coexpressed with the alpha(1C) subunit, assessment by confocal microscopy showed an 86 and 225% increase of the channel density, respectively. Simultaneous coexpression of alpha(2)/delta and beta(2a) subunits resulted in a cooperative (470%) increase. Electrophysiological measurements performed in parallel revealed that the current augmentation by the alpha(2)/delta subunit is totally attributable to an increase in channel density, whereas the beta(2a) subunit, in addition to increasing channel density, also facilitates channel opening.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In previous reports we demonstrated that ginsenosides, active ingredients of Panax ginseng, affect some subsets of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels in neuronal cells expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. However, the major component(s) of ginseng that affect cloned Ca(2+) channel subtypes such as alpha(1C) (L)-, alpha(1B) (N)-, alpha(1A) (P/Q)-, a1E (R)- and a1G (T) have not been identified. Here, we used the two-microelectrode volt-age clamp technique to characterize the effects of ginsenosides and ginsenoside metabolites on Ba(2+) currents (IBa) in Xenopus oocytes expressing five different Ca(2+) channel subtypes. Exposure to ginseng total saponins (GTS) induced voltage-dependent, dose-dependent and reversible inhibition of the five channel subtypes, with particularly strong inhibition of the a1G-type. Of the various ginsenosides, Rb(1), Rc, Re, Rf, Rg(1), Rg(3), and Rh(2), ginsenoside Rg(3) also inhibited all five channel subtypes and ginsenoside Rh(2) had most effect on the a1C- and a1E-type Ca(2+) channels. Compound K (CK), a protopanaxadiol ginsenoside metabolite, strongly inhibited only the a(1G)-type of Ca(2+) channel, whereas M4, a protopanaxatriol ginsenoside metabolite, had almost no effect on any of the channels. Rg(3), Rh(2), and CK shifted the steady-state activation curves but not the inactivation curves in the depolarizing direction in the alpha(1B)- and alpha(1A)-types. These results reveal that Rg(3), Rh(2) and CK are the major inhibitors of Ca(2+) channels in Panax ginseng, and that they show some Ca(2+) channel selectivity.  相似文献   

10.
Ca(2+)-loaded calmodulin normally inhibits multiple Ca(2+)-channels upon dangerous elevation of intracellular Ca(2+) and protects cells from Ca(2+)-cytotoxicity, so blocking of calmodulin should theoretically lead to uncontrolled elevation of intracellular Ca(2+). Paradoxically, classical anti-psychotic, anti-calmodulin drugs were noted here to inhibit Ca(2+)-uptake via the vanilloid inducible Ca(2+)-channel/inflamatory pain receptor 1 (TRPV1), which suggests that calmodulin inhibitors may block pore formation and Ca(2+) entry. Functional assays on TRPV1 expressing cells support direct, dose-dependent inhibition of vanilloid-induced (45)Ca(2+)-uptake at microM concentrations: calmidazolium (broad range) > or = trifluoperazine (narrow range) chlorpromazine/amitriptyline>fluphenazine>W-7 and W-13 (only partially). Most likely a short acidic domain at the pore loop of the channel orifice functions as binding site either for Ca(2+) or anti-calmodulin drugs. Camstatin, a selective peptide blocker of calmodulin, inhibits vanilloid-induced Ca(2+)-uptake in intact TRPV1(+) cells, and suggests an extracellular site of inhibition. TRPV1(+), inflammatory pain-conferring nociceptive neurons from sensory ganglia, were blocked by various anti-psychotic and anti-calmodulin drugs. Among them, calmidazolium, the most effective calmodulin agonist, blocked Ca(2+)-entry by a non-competitive kinetics, affecting the TRPV1 at a different site than the vanilloid binding pocket. Data suggest that various calmodulin antagonists dock to an extracellular site, not found in other Ca(2+)-channels. Calmodulin antagonist-evoked inhibition of TRPV1 and NMDA receptors/Ca(2+)-channels was validated by microiontophoresis of calmidazolium to laminectomised rat monitored with extracellular single unit recordings in vivo. These unexpected findings may explain empirically noted efficacy of clinical pain adjuvant therapy that justify efforts to develop hits into painkillers, selective to sensory Ca(2+)-channels but not affecting motoneurons.  相似文献   

11.
We have positionally cloned and characterized a new calcium channel auxiliary subunit, alpha(2)delta-2 (CACNA2D2), which shares 56% amino acid identity with the known alpha(2)delta-1 subunit. The gene maps to the critical human tumor suppressor gene region in chromosome 3p21.3, showing very frequent allele loss and occasional homozygous deletions in lung, breast, and other cancers. The tissue distribution of alpha(2)delta-2 expression is different from alpha(2)delta-1, and alpha(2)delta-2 mRNA is most abundantly expressed in lung and testis and well expressed in brain, heart, and pancreas. In contrast, alpha(2)delta-1 is expressed predominantly in brain, heart, and skeletal muscle. When co-expressed (via cRNA injections) with alpha(1B) and beta(3) subunits in Xenopus oocytes, alpha(2)delta-2 increased peak size of the N-type Ca(2+) currents 9-fold, and when co-expressed with alpha(1C) or alpha(1G) subunits in Xenopus oocytes increased peak size of L-type channels 2-fold and T-type channels 1.8-fold, respectively. Anti-peptide antibodies detect the expression of a 129-kDa alpha(2)delta-2 polypeptide in some but not all lung tumor cells. We conclude that the alpha(2)delta-2 gene encodes a functional auxiliary subunit of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels. Because of its chromosomal location and expression patterns, CACNA2D2 needs to be explored as a potential tumor suppressor gene linking Ca(2+) signaling and lung, breast, and other cancer pathogenesis. The homologous location on mouse chromosome 9 is also the site of the mouse neurologic mutant ducky (du), and thus, CACNA2D2 is also a candidate gene for this inherited idiopathic generalized epilepsy syndrome.  相似文献   

12.
It is known that the Na/K-ATPase alpha1 subunit interacts directly with inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP(3)) receptors. In this study we tested whether this interaction is required for extracellular stimuli to efficiently regulate endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) release. Using cultured pig kidney LLC-PK1 cells as a model, we demonstrated that graded knockdown of the cellular Na/K-ATPase alpha1 subunit resulted in a parallel attenuation of ATP-induced ER Ca(2+) release. When the knockdown cells were rescued by knocking in a rat alpha1, the expression of rat alpha1 restored not only the cellular Na/K-ATPase but also ATP-induced ER Ca(2+) release. Mechanistically, this defect in ATP-induced ER Ca(2+) release was neither due to the changes in the amount or the function of cellular IP(3) and P2Y receptors nor the ER Ca(2+) content. However, the alpha1 knockdown did redistribute cellular IP(3) receptors. The pool of IP(3) receptors that resided close to the plasma membrane was abolished. Because changes in the plasma membrane proximity could reduce the efficiency of signal transmission from P2Y receptors to the ER, we further determined the dose-dependent effects of ATP on protein kinase Cepsilon activation and ER Ca(2+) release. The data showed that the alpha1 knockdown de-sensitized the ATP-induced ER Ca(2+) release but not PKCepsilon activation. Moreover, expression of the N terminus of Na/K-ATPase alpha1 subunit not only disrupted the formation of the Na/K-ATPase-IP(3) receptor complex but also abolished the ATP-induced Ca(2+) release. Finally, we observed that the alpha1 knockdown was also effective in attenuating ER Ca(2+) release provoked by angiotensin II and epidermal growth factor.  相似文献   

13.
Functional cardiac L-type calcium channels are composed of the pore-forming alpha(1C) subunit and the regulatory beta(2) and alpha(2)/delta subunits. To investigate possible developmental changes in calcium channel composition, we examined the temporal expression pattern of alpha(1C) and beta(2) subunits during cardiac ontogeny in mice and rats, using sequence-specific antibodies. Fetal and neonatal hearts showed two size forms of alpha(1C) with 250 and 220 kDa. Quantitative immunoblotting revealed that the rat cardiac 250-kDa alpha(1C) subunit increased about 10-fold from fetal days 12-20 and declined during postnatal maturation, while the 220-kDa alpha(1C) decreased to undetectable levels. The expression profile of the 85-kDa beta(2) subunit was completely different: beta(2) was not detected at fetal day 12, rose in the neonatal stage, and persisted during maturation. Additional beta(2)-stained bands of 100 and 90 kDa were detected in fetal and newborn hearts, suggesting the transient expression of beta(2) subunit variants. Furthermore, two fetal proteins with beta(4) immunoreactivity were identified in rat hearts that declined during prenatal development. In the fetal rat heart, beta(4) gene expression was confirmed by RT-PCR. Cardiac and brain beta(4) mRNA shared the 3 prime region, predicting identical primary sequences between amino acid residues 62-519, diverging however, at the 5 prime portion. The data indicate differential developmental changes in the expression of Ca(2+) channel subunits and suggest a role of fetal alpha(1C) and beta isoforms in the assembly of Ca(2+) channels in immature cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

14.
Cyclic AMP-dependent modulation of cardiac L-type voltage-dependent Ca channel (VDCC) has been probed in Xenopus laevis oocytes injected with poly(A+) RNA from rat heart. A 2 to 3 fold increase of the Ba current amplitude was routinely obtained upon microinjection of cAMP (50-500 microM). Inhibition of protein kinase A (PKA) dramatically reduced the Ba current amplitude, indicating that cAMP-dependent modulation plays an important role in maintaining the basal activity of expressed Ca channels. Moreover, the effects of the DHP agonist Bay K 8644 on kinetic properties of expressed Ba current (IBa,C) were dependent on PKA activation. The results suggest that most expressed cardiac L-type VDCCs are phosphorylated and demonstrate that reconstitution in Xenopus oocytes is a suitable approach to address how phosphorylation regulates VDCC activity.  相似文献   

15.
Chemical cross-linking as a probe of conformation has consistently shown that activators, including Ca(2+) ions, of the (alphabetagammadelta)(4) phosphorylase kinase holoenzyme (PhK) alter the interactions between its regulatory alpha and catalytic gamma subunits. The gamma subunit is also known to interact with the delta subunit, an endogenous molecule of calmodulin that mediates the activation of PhK by Ca(2+) ions. In this study, we have used two-hybrid screening and chemical cross-linking to dissect the regulatory quaternary interactions involving these subunits. The yeast two-hybrid system indicated that regions near the C termini of the gamma (residues 343-386) and alpha (residues 1060-1237) subunits interact. The association of this region of alpha with gamma was corroborated by the isolation of a cross-linked fragment of alpha containing residues 1015-1237 from an alpha-gamma dimer that had been formed within the PhK holoenzyme by formaldehyde, a nearly zero-length cross-linker. Because the region of gamma that we found to interact with alpha has previously been shown to contain a high affinity binding site for calmodulin (Dasgupta, M., Honeycutt, T., and Blumenthal, D. K. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 17156-17163), we tested the influence of Ca(2+) on the conformation of the alpha subunit and found that the region of alpha that interacts with gamma was, in fact, perturbed by Ca(2+). The results herein support the existence of a Ca(2+)-sensitive communication network among the delta, gamma, and alpha subunits, with the regulatory domain of gamma being the primary mediator. The similarity of such a Ca(2+)-dependent network to the interactions among troponin C, troponin I, and actin is discussed in light of the known structural and functional similarities between troponin I and the gamma subunit of PhK.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of cyclic AMP (cAMP) and cyclic GMP (cGMP) on dihydropyridine sensitive Ca2+ channels were investigated under voltage-clamp in defolliculated Pleurodeles oocytes. Intracellular injection of cAMP or extracellular application of the permeable cAMP analogue (8-Bromo cAMP, 8Br-cAMP) decreased the Ba current (IBa). This effect on IBa was blocked by the injection of protein kinase A inhibitor. Similar results were found upon internal application of the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A. In contrast, the injection of cGMP or perfusion of 8Br-cGMP increased IBa amplitude. The increase of IBa by 8Br-cGMP was blocked by the injection of the selective inhibitor of protein kinase G (KT5823).These results support the hypothesis that the basal Ba current amplitude of Pleurodeles oocytes is under the control of Protein Kinases A (PKA) and G (PKG) activity.This regulation of Ca2+ channels by the second messengers, and particularly by cAMP may reflect an important step in the maturation processus of Pleurodeles oocytes.  相似文献   

17.
The dihydropyridine (DHP)-binding site has been identified within L-type Ca(2+) channel alpha(1C) subunit. However, the molecular mechanism underlying modulation of Ca(2+) channel gating by DHPs has not been clarified. To search for novel determinants of high affinity DHP binding, we introduced point mutations in the rat brain Ca(2+) channel alpha(1C) subunit (rbCII or Ca(v)1.2c) based on the comparison of amino acid sequences between rbCII and the ascidian L-type Ca(2+) channel alpha(1) subunit, which is insensitive to DHPs. The alpha(1C) mutants (S1115A, S1146A, and A1420S) and rbCII were transiently expressed in BHK6 cells with beta(1a) and alpha(2)/delta subunits. The mutation did not affect the electrophysiological properties of the Ca(2+) channel, or the voltage- and concentration-dependent block of Ca(2+) channel currents produced by diltiazem and verapamil. However, the S1115A channel was significantly less sensitive to DHP antagonists. Interestingly, in the S1115A channel, DHP agonists failed to enhance whole-cell Ca(2+) channel currents and the prolongation of mean open time, as well as the increment of NP(o). Responsiveness to the non-DHP agonist FPL-64176 was also markedly reduced in the S1115A channel. When S1115 was replaced by other amino acids (S1115D, S1115T, or S1115V), only S1115T was slightly sensitive to S-(-)-Bay K 8644. These results indicate that the hydroxyl group of Ser(1115) in IIIS5-S6 linker of the L-type Ca(2+) channel alpha(1C) subunit plays a critical role in DHP binding and in the action of DHP Ca(2+) channel agonists.  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the slope of the function relating the action potential duration (APD) and the diastolic interval, known as the APD restitution curve, plays an important role in the initiation and maintenance of ventricular fibrillation. Since the APD restitution slope critically depends on the kinetics of the L-type Ca(2+) current, we hypothesized that manipulation of the subunit composition of these channels may represent a powerful strategy to control cardiac arrhythmias. We studied the kinetic properties of the human L-type Ca(2+) channel (Ca(v)1.2) coexpressed with the alpha(2)delta-subunit alone (alpha(1C) + alpha(2)delta) or in combination with beta(2a), beta(2b), or beta(3) subunits (alpha(1C) + alpha(2)delta + beta), using Ca(2+) as the charge carrier. We then incorporated the kinetic properties observed experimentally into the L-type Ca(2+) current mathematical model of the cardiac action potential to demonstrate that the APD restitution slope can be selectively controlled by altering the subunit composition of the Ca(2+) channel. Assuming that beta(2b) most closely resembles the native cardiac L-type Ca(2+) current, the absence of beta, as well as the coexpression of beta(2a), was found to flatten restitution slope and stabilize spiral waves. These results imply that subunit modification of L-type Ca(2+) channels can potentially be used as an antifibrillatory strategy.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We have investigated the functional consequences of three P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel alpha1A (Ca(v)2.1alpha(1)) subunit mutations associated with different forms of ataxia (episodic ataxia type 2 (EA-2), R1279Stop, AY1593/1594D; progressive ataxia (PA), G293R). Mutations were introduced into human alpha1A cDNA and heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes or tsA-201 cells (with alpha(2)delta and beta1a) for electrophysiological and biochemical analysis. G293R reduced current density in both expression systems without changing single channel conductance. R1279Stop and AY1593/1594D protein were expressed in tsA-201 cells but failed to yield inward barium currents (I(Ba)). However, AY1593/1594D mediated I(Ba) when expressed in oocytes. G293R and AY1593/1594D shifted the current-voltage relationship to more positive potentials and enhanced inactivation during depolarizing pulses (3 s) and pulse trains (100 ms, 1 Hz). Mutation AY1593/1594D also slowed recovery from inactivation. Single channel recordings revealed a change in fast channel gating for G293R evident as a decrease in the mean open time. Our data support the hypothesis that a pronounced loss of P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel function underlies the pathophysiology of EA-2 and PA. In contrast to other EA-2 mutations, AY1593/1594D and G293R form at least partially functional channels.  相似文献   

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