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1.
In this report we describe the application of spectroscopic methods to the study of Ca2+ release by isolated native sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes from rabbit skeletal muscle. To date, dual-wavelength spectroscopy of arsenazo III and antipyrylazo III difference absorbance have been the most common spectroscopic methods for the assay of SR Ca2+ transport. The utility of these methods is the ability to manipulate intraluminal Ca2+ loading of SR vesicles. These methods have also been useful for studying the effect of both agonists and antagonists upon SR Ca2+ release and Ca2+ uptake. In this study, we have developed the application of Calcium Green-2, a long-wavelength excitable fluorescent indicator, for the study of SR Ca2+ uptake and release. With this method we demonstrate how ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channel opening and closing is regulated in a complex manner by the relative distribution of Ca2+ between extraluminal and intraluminal Ca2+ compartments. Intraluminal Ca2+ is shown to be a key regulator of Ca2+ channel opening. However, these methods also reveal that the intraluminal Ca2+ threshold for Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release varies as a function of extraluminal Ca2+ concentration. The ability to study how the relative distribution of a finite pool of Ca2+ across the SR membrane influences Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+ release may be useful for understanding how the ryanodine receptor is regulated, in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Ryanodine receptor (RyR)-gated Ca2+ stores have recently been identified in cochlear spiral ganglion neurons (SGN) and likely contribute to Ca2+ signalling associated with auditory neurotransmission. Here, we identify an ionotropic glutamate receptor signal transduction pathway which invokes RyR-gated Ca2+ stores in SGN via Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR). Ca2+ levels were recorded in SGN in situ within rat cochlear slices (postnatal day 0-17) using the Ca2+ indicator fluo-4. RyR-gated Ca2+ stores were confirmed by caffeine-induced increases in intracellular Ca2+ which were blocked by ryanodine (100 microM) and were independent of external Ca2+. Glutamate evoked comparable increases in intracellular Ca2+, but required the presence of external Ca2+. Ca2+ influx via the glutamate receptor was found to elicit CICR via RyR-gated Ca2+ stores, as shown by the inhibition of the response by prior depletion of the Ca2+ stores with caffeine, the SERCA inhibitor thapsigargin, or ryanodine. The glutamate analogue AMPA (alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid) elicited Ca2+ responses that could be inhibited by caffeine. Glutamate- and AMPA-mediated Ca2+ responses were eliminated with the AMPA/Kainate receptor antagonist DNQX (6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione). These data demonstrate functional coupling between somatic AMPA-type glutamate receptors and intracellular Ca(2+) stores via RyR-dependent CICR in primary auditory neurons.  相似文献   

3.
Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) occurs in smooth muscle as spontaneous SR Ca(2+) release or Ca(2+) sparks and, in some spiking tissues, as Ca(2+) release that is triggered by the activation of sarcolemmal Ca(2+) channels. Both processes display spatial localization in that release occurs at a higher frequency at specific subcellular regions. We have used two-photon flash photolysis (TPFP) of caged Ca(2+) (DMNP-EDTA) in Fluo-4-loaded urinary bladder smooth muscle cells to determine the extent to which spatially localized increases in Ca(2+) activate SR release and to further understand the molecular and biophysical processes underlying CICR. TPFP resulted in localized Ca(2+) release in the form of Ca(2+) sparks and Ca(2+) waves that were distinguishable from increases in Ca(2+) associated with Ca(2+) uncaging, unequivocally demonstrating that Ca(2+) release occurs subsequent to a localized rise in [Ca(2+)](i). TPFP-triggered Ca(2+) release was not constrained to a few discharge regions but could be activated at all areas of the cell, with release usually occurring at or within several microns of the site of photolysis. As expected, the process of CICR was dominated by ryanodine receptor (RYR) activity, as ryanodine abolished individual Ca(2+) sparks and evoked release with different threshold and kinetics in FKBP12.6-null cells. However, TPFP CICR was not completely inhibited by ryanodine; Ca(2+) release with distinct kinetic features occurred with a higher TPFP threshold in the presence of ryanodine. This high threshold release was blocked by xestospongin C, and the pharmacological sensitivity and kinetics were consistent with CICR release at high local [Ca(2+)](i) through inositol trisphosphate (InsP(3)) receptors (InsP(3)Rs). We conclude that CICR activated by localized Ca(2+) release bears essential similarities to those observed by the activation of I(Ca) (i.e., major dependence on the type 2 RYR), that the release is not spatially constrained to a few specific subcellular regions, and that Ca(2+) release through InsP(3)R can occur at high local [Ca(2+)](i).  相似文献   

4.
Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) plays an important role in the generation of cytosolic Ca2+ signals in many cell types. However, it is inherently difficult to distinguish experimentally between the contributions of messenger-induced Ca2+ release and CICR. We have directly tested the CICR sensitivity of different regions of intact pancreatic acinar cells using local uncaging of caged Ca2+. In the apical region, local uncaging of Ca2+ was able to trigger a CICR wave, which propagated toward the base. CICR could not be triggered in the basal region, despite the known presence of ryanodine receptors. The triggering of CICR from the apical region was inhibited by a pharmacological block of ryanodine or inositol trisphosphate receptors, indicating that global signals require coordinated Ca2+ release. Subthreshold agonist stimulation increased the probability of triggering CICR by apical uncaging, and uncaging-induced CICR could activate long-lasting Ca2+ oscillations. However, with subthreshold stimulation, CICR could still not be initiated in the basal region. CICR is the major process responsible for global Ca2+ transients, and intracellular variations in sensitivity to CICR predetermine the activation pattern of Ca2+ waves.  相似文献   

5.
The role of a Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) mechanism in the generation of agonist-induced increases of intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) was studied in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. In single cells, repetitive stimulations with caffeine at 200-s intervals evoked reproducible spikes of [Ca2+]i. Ryanodine, an agent that interacts with the CICR channel of muscle, inhibited the caffeine-induced spikes of [Ca2+]i in a "use-dependent" way. High affinity binding sites for [3H]ryanodine (Kd 3.3 nM, Bmax 26 fmol/mg protein) were also detected in membranes from chromaffin cells, supporting the presence of a caffeine- and ryanodine-sensitive CICR channel. Pretreatment of single cells with caffeine + ryanodine to reduce the size of the caffeine-sensitive Ca2+ compartment inhibited a subsequent spike of [Ca2+]i evoked by histamine, a D-myo-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-forming agonist. This demonstrates that a significant portion of the Ca2+ released by histamine comes from a caffeine- and ryanodine-sensitive pool. Ryanodine inhibited by 50% the size of [Ca2+]i spikes evoked by repetitive stimulation with histamine and did so in a use-dependent manner. These data suggest that, in addition to D-myoinositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate, activation of a caffeine- and ryanodine-sensitive CICR channel participates in the generation of histamine-induced release of intracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

6.
Imaizumi  Yuji  Ohi  Yoshiaki  Yamamura  Hisao  Morimura  Kozo  Muraki  Katsuhiko 《Neurophysiology》2003,35(3-4):169-174
The contribution of the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) mechanism in excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling and the tightness of the coupling between Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ release are still controversial in smooth muscle cells (SMC). In SMC isolated from the guinea-pig vas deferens or urinary bladder, a depolarizing stimulus initially induced spot-like increases in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+] i ), called “Ca2+ hot spots,” at several superficial areas in the cell. When a weak stimulus (a small or a short depolarizing step) was applied, only a few Ca2+ hot spots appeared transiently in the superficial area but did not spread into other regions, to trigger global [Ca2+] i rise. Such depolarization-evoked local Ca2+ transients were distinctive from spontaneous Ca2+ sparks, since the former were susceptible to Ca2+ blockers, ryanodine, and inhibitors of the Ca2+ pump in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), suggesting pivotal roles of Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCC) and Ca2+ release from the SR through ryanodine receptors (RyR) for the activation of Ca2+ spots. Frequently discharging Ca2+ spark sites (FDS) under resting conditions were located exactly in the same areas as Ca2+ hot spots evoked by depolarization, indicating the existence of distinct local junction sites for tight coupling between VDCC in the plasmalemma and RyR in the SR. Co-localization of clusters of RyR and large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels was also suggested. The fast and tight coupling for CICR in these junctional sites was triggered also by an action potential, whereas a slower spread of Ca2+ wave to the whole-cell areas suggests the loose coupling in propagating CICR to other cell areas. It can therefore be postulated that CICR may occur in two steps upon depolarization; the initial CICR in distinct junctional sites shows tight coupling between Ca2+ influx and release, and the following CICR may propagate slow Ca2+ waves to other areas. Ryanodine receptors form a multiprotein complex with molecules such as calsequestrin, junctin, triadin, junctophilins, and FK506-binding proteins, which directly or indirectly regulate the RyR activity and the tight coupling. Moreover, an evoked Ca2+ spot may enhance Ca2+ uptake by neighboring mitochondria and their ATP production to increase energy supply to the Ca2+ pump of the SR in the microdomain.  相似文献   

7.
The photooxidizing xanthene dye rose bengal (10 nM to 1 microM) stimulates rapid Ca2+ release from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. Following fusion of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles to an artificial bilayer, reconstituted Ca2+ channel activity is stimulated by nanomolar concentrations of rose bengal in the presence of a broad-spectrum light source. Rose bengal does not appear to affect K+ channels present in the SR. Following reconstitution of the sulfhydryl-activated 106-kDa Ca2+ channel protein into a bilayer, rose bengal activates the isolated protein in a light-dependent manner. Ryanodine at a concentration of 10 nM is shown to lock the 106-kDa channel protein in a subconductance state which can be reversed by subsequent addition of 500 nM rose bengal. This apparent displacement of bound ryanodine by nanomolar concentrations of rose bengal is also directly observed upon measurement of [3H]ryanodine binding to JSR vesicles. These observations indicate that photooxidation of rose bengal causes a stimulation of the Ca2+ release protein from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum by interacting with the ryanodine binding site. Furthermore, similar effects of rose bengal on isolated SR vesicles, on single channel measurements following fusion of SR vesicles, and following incorporation of the isolated 106-kDa protein strongly implicates the 106-kDa sulfhydryl-activated Ca2+ channel protein in the Ca2+ release process.  相似文献   

8.
Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) occurs in frog motor nerve terminals after ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are primed for activation by conditioning large Ca2+ entry. We studied which type of RyR exists, whether CICR occurs without conditioning Ca2+ entry and how RyRs are primed. Immunohistochemistry revealed the existence of RyR3 in motor nerve terminals and axons and both RyR1 and RyR3 in muscle fibers. A blocker of RyR, 8-(N,N-diethylamino)octyl 3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride (TMB-8) slightly decreased rises in intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) induced by a short tetanus (50 Hz, 1-2s), but not after treatment with ryanodine. Repetitive tetani (50 Hz for 15s every 20s) produced repetitive rises in [Ca2+]i, whose amplitude overall waxed and waned. TMB-8 blocked the waxing and waning components. Ryanodine suppressed a slow increase in end-plate potentials (EPPs) induced by stimuli (33.3 Hz, 15s) in a low Ca2+, high Mg2+ solution. KN-62, a blocker of Ca(2+)/calmoduline-activated protein kinase II (CaMKII), slightly reduced short tetanus-induced rises in [Ca2+]i, but markedly the slow waxing and waning rises produced by repetitive tetani in both normal and low Ca2+, high Mg2+ solutions. Likewise, KN-62, but not KN-04, an inactive analog, suppressed slow increases in EPP amplitude and miniature EPP frequency during long tetanus. Thus, CICR normally occurs weakly via RyR3 activation by single impulse-induced Ca2+ entry in frog motor nerve terminals and greatly after the priming of RyR via CaMKII activation by conditioning Ca2+ entry, thus, facilitating transmitter exocytosis and its plasticity.  相似文献   

9.
Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) is a well characterized activity in skeletal and cardiac muscles mediated by the ryanodine receptors. The present study demonstrates CICR in the non-excitable parotid acinar cells, which resembles the mechanism described in cardiac myocytes. Partial depletion of internal Ca2+ stores leads to a minimal activation of Ca2+ influx. Ca2+ influx through this pathway results in an explosive mobilization of Ca2+ from the majority of the stores by CICR. Thus, stimulation of parotid acinar cells in Ca2+ -free medium with 0.5 microm carbachol releases approximately 5% of the Ca2+ mobilizable by 1 mm carbachol. Addition of external Ca2+ induced the same Ca2+ release observed in maximally stimulated cells. Similar results were obtained by a short treatment with 2.5-10 microm cyclopiazonic acid, an inhibitor of the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase pump. The Ca2+ release induced by the addition of external Ca2+ was largely independent of IP(3)Rs because it was reduced by only approximately 30% by the inhibition of the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors with caffeine or heparin. Measurements of Ca2+ -activated outward current and [Ca2+](i) suggested that most CICR triggered by Ca2+ influx occurred away from the plasma membrane. Measurement of the response to several concentrations of cyclopiazonic acid revealed that Ca2+ influx that regulates CICR is associated with a selective portion of the internal Ca2+ pool. The minimal activation of Ca2+ influx by partial store depletion was confirmed by the measurement of Mn2+ influx. Inhibition of Ca2+ influx with SKF96365 or 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate prevented activation of CICR observed on addition of external Ca2+. These findings provide evidence for activation of CICR by Ca2+ influx in non-excitable cells, demonstrate a previously unrecognized role for Ca2+ influx in triggering CICR, and indicate that CICR in non-excitable cells resembles CICR in cardiac myocytes with the exception that in cardiac cells Ca2+ influx is mediated by voltage-regulated Ca2+ channels whereas in non-excitable cells Ca2+ influx is mediated by store-operated channels.  相似文献   

10.
T E Nelson  K E Nelson 《FEBS letters》1990,263(2):292-294
A heavy skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fraction was actively loaded stepwise with calcium until Ca2(+)-induced Ca2+ release occurred. The total Ca2+ load, T1, at which release occurred is postulated to be regulated by an intraluminal, low-affinity receptor. After obtaining T1, the critical concentration of Ca2+ required extraluminally (T2) was determined. T1 averaged 58.6 +/- S.D., 6.9 nmol Ca2+/mg SR and T2 averaged 2.14 +/- S.D., 0.24 microM. Both T1 and T2 were increased by Mg2+ and decreased by caffeine. Ruthenium red increased T2 more than T1 while ryanodine had no effect on T1 but markedly increased T2. The results suggest that two Ca2+ regulatory sites may be functional for Ca2(+)-induced Ca2+ release from SR.  相似文献   

11.
We observed the effects of ryanodine on the aequorin luminescence, membrane potential, and contraction of canine cardiac Purkinje fibers and ferret ventricular muscle. In canine Purkinje fibers, ryanodine (10 nM to 1 microM) abolished the spontaneous spatiotemporal fluctuations in [Ca2+] that occur as a result of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) during exposure to low-Na+ solutions. Ryanodine strongly reduced the twitch and both components of the intracellular aequorin luminescence signal (L1 and L2), which normally accompanies contraction. The small luminescence signals that remained in ryanodine could be abolished by a Ca2+ channel blocker (nitrendipine, 10 microM). The plateau phase of the action potential was reduced by nitrendipine in the presence of ryanodine, which suggests that Ca2+ current was not blocked by ryanodine. In ferret ventricular tissue, ryanodine (1 microM) prolonged the action potential and reduced the peak amplitudes of both the aequorin transient and the twitch, while greatly prolonging the time-to-peak of both signals. Increases in extracellular [Ca2+] restored the peak amplitudes of the twitch and the aequorin luminescence, but did not restore the normal time-to-peak. The results show that in both tissues, the negative inotropic effect of ryanodine is due to the reduction of the intracellular [Ca2+] transient. Inasmuch as neither Ca2+ entry via surface membrane Ca2+ channels nor Na+-Ca2+ exchange appears to be blocked by ryanodine, the most probable cause of reduction of the [Ca2+] transient is an inhibition of Ca2+ release by the SR.  相似文献   

12.
Postnatal maturation of the rat heart is characterized by major changes in the mechanism of excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling. In the neonate, the t tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) are not fully developed yet. Consequently, Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR) does not play a central role in E-C coupling. In the neonate, most of the Ca(2+) that triggers contraction comes through the sarcolemma. In this work, we defined the contribution of the sarcolemmal Ca(2+) entry and the Ca(2+) released from the SR to the Ca(2+) transient during the first 3 wk of postnatal development. To this end, intracellular Ca(2+) transients were measured in whole hearts from neonate rats by using the pulsed local field fluorescence technique. To estimate the contribution of each Ca(2+) flux to the global intracellular Ca(2+) transient, different pharmacological agents were used. Ryanodine was applied to evaluate ryanodine receptor-mediated Ca(2+) release from the SR, nifedipine for dihydropyridine-sensitive L-type Ca(2+) current, Ni(2+) for the current resulting from the reverse-mode Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange, and mibefradil for the T-type Ca(2+) current. Our results showed that the relative contribution of each Ca(2+) flux changes considerably during the first 3 wk of postnatal development. Early after birth (1-5 days), the sarcolemmal Ca(2+) flux predominates, whereas at 3 wk of age, CICR from the SR is the most important. This transition may reflect the progressive development of the t tube-SR units characteristic of mature myocytes. We have hence directly defined in the whole beating heart the developmental changes of E-C coupling previously evaluated in single (acutely isolated or cultured) cells and multicellular preparations.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the effects of reduced pH on Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Frog semitendinosus fiber bundles (1-3/bundle) were chemically skinned via saponin treatment (50 micrograms/mL, 20 min), which removes the sarcolemma and leaves the SR functional. The SR was first depleted of Ca2+ then loaded for 2 min at pCa (log free Ca2+ concentration) 6.6. CICR was then evoked by exposing the fibers to pCa 5-7 for 5-60 s. CICR was evoked both in the absence of ATP and Mg2+ and in the presence of beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine-5'-triphosphate (AMPPCP, a nonhydrolyzable form of ATP) and Mg2+. Ca2+ remaining in the SR was then assayed via caffeine (25 mM) contracture. In all cases, CICR evoked at pH 6.5 resulted in larger caffeine contractures than that evoked at 7.0, suggesting that more Ca2+ was released during CICR at the higher pH. Accordingly, rate constants for CICR were significantly greater at pH 7.0 than at pH 6.5. These results indicate that reduced pH depresses CICR from skeletal muscle SR.  相似文献   

14.
We reported earlier that the two ryanodine receptor (RyR) isoforms (alpha- and beta-RyR) purified from frog skeletal muscle were equipotent in the Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR) activity (Murayama, T., Kurebayashi, N., and Ogawa, Y. (2000) Biophys. J. 78, 1810-1824). Whether this is also the case with the native Ca(2+) release channel in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), however, remains to be determined. Taking advantage of the facts that [(3)H]ryanodine binds only to the open form of the channels and that it is practically irreversible at 4 degrees C, we devised a method to separate the total binding to contributions of alpha- and beta-RyR, using immunoprecipitation with an alpha-RyR-specific monoclonal antibody. Surprisingly, the binding of alpha-RyR was strongly suppressed to as low as approximately 4% that of beta-RyR in the SR vesicles. The two isoforms, however, showed no difference in sensitivity to Ca(2+), adenine nucleotides, or caffeine. This reduced binding of alpha-RyR was ascribed to the low affinity for [(3)H]ryanodine, with no change in the maximal binding sites. Solubilization of SR with 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid partly remedied this nonequivalence, whereas 1 m NaCl was ineffective. 12-kDa FK506-binding protein (FKBP12), however, could not be responsible for it, because FK506 treatment did not eliminate the suppression, in contrast to marked removal of 12-kDa FK506-binding protein from alpha-RyR. These results suggest that alpha-RyR in the SR may serve Ca(2+) release in a mode other than CICR, being selectively suppressed in CICR.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism by which chloride increases sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ permeability was investigated. In the presence of 3 microM Ca2+, Ca2+ release from 45Ca(2+)-loaded SR vesicles prepared from procine skeletal muscle was increased approximately 4-fold when the media contained 150 mM chloride versus 150 mM propionate, whereas in the presence of 30 nM Ca2+, Ca2+ release was similar in the chloride- and the propionate-containing media. Ca(2+)-activated [3H]ryanodine binding to skeletal muscle SR was also increased (2- to 10-fold) in media in which propionate or other organic anions were replaced with chloride; however, chloride had little or no effect on cardiac muscle SR 45Ca2+ release or [3H]ryanodine binding. Ca(2+)-activated [3H]ryanodine binding was increased approximately 4.5-fold after reconstitution of skeletal muscle RYR protein into liposomes, and [3H]ryanodine binding to reconstituted RYR protein was similar in chloride- and propionate-containing media, suggesting that the sensitivity of the RYR protein to changes in the anionic composition of the media may be diminished upon reconstitution. Together, our results demonstrate a close correlation between chloride-dependent increases in SR Ca2+ permeability and increased Ca2+ activation of skeletal muscle RYR channels. We postulate that media containing supraphysiological concentrations of chloride or other inorganic anions may enhance skeletal muscle RYR activity by favoring a conformational state of the channel that exhibits increased activation by Ca2+ in comparison to the Ca2+ activation exhibited by this channel in native membranes in the presence of physiological chloride (< or = 10 mM). Transitions to this putative Ca(2+)-activatable state may thus provide a mechanism for controlling the activation of RYR channels in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

16.
The regulation of the Ca2+ -induced Ca2+ release (CICR) from intracellular stores is a critical step in the cardiac cycle. The inherent positive feedback of CICR should make it a self-regenerating process. It is accepted that CICR must be governed by some negative control, but its nature is still debated. We explore here the importance of the Ca2+ released from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) on the mechanisms that may control CICR. Specifically, we compared the effect of replacing Ca2+ with Sr2+ on intracellular Ca2+ signaling in intact cardiac myocytes as well as on the function of single ryanodine receptor (RyR) Ca2+ release channels in panar bilayers. In cells, both CICR and Sr2+ -induced Sr2+ release (SISR) were observed. Action potential induced Ca2+ -transients and spontaneous Ca2+ waves were considerably faster than their Sr2+ -mediated counterparts. However, the kinetics of Ca2+ and Sr2+ sparks was similar. At the single RyR channel level, the affinities of Ca2+ and Sr2+ activation were different but the affinities of Ca2+ and Sr2+ inactivation were similar. Fast Ca2+ and Sr2+ stimuli activated RyR channels equally fast but adaptation (a spontaneous slow transition back to steady-state activity levels) was not observed in the Sr2+ case. Together, these results suggest that regulation of the RyR channel by cytosolic Ca2+ is not involved in turning off the Ca2+ spark. In contrast, cytosolic Ca2+ is important in the propagation global Ca2+ release events and in this regard single RyR channel sensitivity to cytosolic Ca2+ activation, not low-affinity cytosolic Ca2+ inactivation, is a key factor. This suggests that the kinetics of local and global RyR-mediated Ca2+ release signals are affected in a distinct way by different divalent cations in cardiac muscle cells.  相似文献   

17.
Intracellular Ca2+ release is involved in setting up Ca2+ signals in all eukaryotic cells. Here we report that an increase in free Ca2+ concentration triggered the release of up to 41 +/- 3% of the intracellular Ca2+ stores in permeabilized A7r5 (embryonic rat aorta) cells with an EC50 of 700 nm. This type of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) was neither mediated by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors nor by ryanodine receptors, because it was not blocked by heparin, 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate, xestospongin C, ruthenium red, or ryanodine. ATP dose-dependently stimulated the CICR mechanism, whereas 10 mm MgCl2 abolished it. CICR was not affected by exogenously added calmodulin (CaM), but CaM1234, a Ca2+-insensitive CaM mutant, strongly inhibited the CICR mechanism. Other proteins of the CaM-like neuronal Ca2+-sensor protein family such as Ca2+-binding protein 1 and neuronal Ca2+ sensor-1 were equally potent for inhibiting the CICR. Removal of endogenous CaM, using a CaM-binding peptide derived from the ryanodine receptor type-1 (amino acids 3614-3643) prevented subsequent activation of the CICR mechanism. A similar CICR mechanism was also found in 16HBE14o-(human bronchial mucosa) cells. We conclude that A7r5 and 16HBE14o-cells express a novel type of CICR mechanism that is silent in normal resting conditions due to inhibition by CaM but becomes activated by a Ca2+-dependent dissociation of CaM. This CICR mechanism, which may be regulated by members of the family of neuronal Ca2+-sensor proteins, may provide an additional route for Ca2+ release that could allow amplification of small Ca2+ signals.  相似文献   

18.
An increase in cytosolic Ca2+ often begins as a Ca2+ wave, and this wave is thought to result from sequential activation of Ca(2+)-sensitive Ca2+ stores across the cell. We tested that hypothesis in pancreatic acinar cells, and since Ca2+ waves may regulate acinar Cl- secretion, we examined whether such waves also are important for amylase secretion. Ca2+ wave speed and direction was determined in individual cells within rat pancreatic acini using confocal line scanning microscopy. Both acetylcholine (ACh) and cholecystokinin-8 induced rapid Ca2+ waves which usually travelled in an apical-to-basal direction. Both caffeine and ryanodine, at concentrations that inhibit Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR), markedly slowed the speed of these waves. Amylase secretion was increased over 3-fold in response to ACh stimulation, and this increase was preserved in the presence of ryanodine. These results indicate that 1) stimulation of either muscarinic or cholecystokinin-8 receptors induces apical-to-basal Ca2+ waves in pancreatic acinar cells, 2) the speed of such waves is dependent upon mobilization of caffeine- and ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ stores, and 3) ACh-induced amylase secretion is not inhibited by ryanodine. These observations provide direct evidence that Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release is important for propagation of cytosolic Ca2+ waves in pancreatic acinar cells.  相似文献   

19.
Many cells express ryanodine receptors (RyRs) whose activation is thought to amplify depolarization-evoked elevations in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration [Ca2+](i) through a process of Ca2+ -induced Ca2+ release (CICR). In neurons, it is usually assumed that CICR triggers net Ca2+ release from an ER Ca2+ store. However, since net ER Ca 2+ transport depends on the relative rates of Ca2+ uptake and release via distinct pathways, weak activation of a CICR pathway during periods of ER Ca accumulation would have a totally different effect: attenuation of Ca2+ accumulation. Stronger CICR activation at higher [Ca2+](i) could further attenuate Ca2+ accumulation or trigger net Ca2+ release, depending on the quantitative properties of the underlying Ca2+ transporters. This and the companion study (Hongpaisan, J., N.B. Pivovarova, S.L. Colgrove, R.D. Leapman, and D.D. Friel, and S.B. Andrews. 2001. J. Gen. Physiol. 118:101-112) investigate which of these CICR "modes" operate during depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry in sympathetic neurons. The present study focuses on small [Ca2+](i) elevations (less than approximately 350 nM) evoked by weak depolarization. The following two approaches were used: (1) Ca2+ fluxes were estimated from simultaneous measurements of [Ca2+](i) and I(Ca) in fura-2-loaded cells (perforated patch conditions), and (2) total ER Ca concentrations ([Ca](ER)) were measured using X-ray microanalysis. Flux analysis revealed triggered net Ca2+ release during depolarization in the presence but not the absence of caffeine, and [Ca2+](i) responses were accelerated by SERCA inhibitors, implicating ER Ca2+ accumulation, which was confirmed by direct [Ca](ER) measurements. Ryanodine abolished caffeine-induced CICR and enhanced depolarization-induced ER Ca2+ accumulation, indicating that activation of the CICR pathway normally attenuates ER Ca2+ accumulation, which is a novel mechanism for accelerating evoked [Ca2+](i) responses. Theory shows how such a low gain mode of CICR can operate during weak stimulation and switch to net Ca2+ release at high [Ca2+](i), a transition demonstrated in the companion study. These results emphasize the importance of the relative rates of Ca2+ uptake and release in defining ER contributions to depolarization-induced Ca2+ signals.  相似文献   

20.
The subcellular distribution of the Ca(2+)-release channel/ryanodine receptor in adult rat papillary myofibers has been determined by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopical studies using affinity purified antibodies against the ryanodine receptor. The receptor is confined to the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) where it is localized to interior and peripheral junctional SR and the corbular SR, but it is absent from the network SR where the SR-Ca(2+)-ATPase and phospholamban are densely distributed. Immunofluorescence labeling of sheep Purkinje fibers show that the ryanodine receptor is confined to discrete foci while the SR-Ca(2+)-ATPase is distributed in a continuous network-like structure present at the periphery as well as throughout interior regions of these myofibers. Because Purkinje fibers lack T- tubules, these results indicate that the ryanodine receptor is localized not only to the peripheral junctional SR but also to corbular SR densely distributed in interfibrillar spaces of the I-band regions. We have previously identified both corbular SR and junctional SR in cardiac muscle as potential Ca(2+)-storage/Ca(2+)-release sites by demonstrating that the Ca2+ binding protein calsequestrin and calcium are very densely distributed in these two specialized domains of cardiac SR in situ. The results presented here provide strong evidence in support of the hypothesis that corbular SR is indeed a site of Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release via the ryanodine receptor during excitation contraction coupling in cardiac muscle. Furthermore, these results indicate that the function of the cardiac Ca(2+)-release channel/ryanodine receptor is not confined to junctional complexes between SR and the sarcolemma.  相似文献   

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