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1.
Ca(2+)-induced mitochondrial depolarization was studied in single isolated rat brain and liver mitochondria. Digital imaging techniques and rhodamine 123 were used for mitochondrial membrane potential measurements. Low Ca(2+) concentrations (about 30--100 nM) initiated oscillations of the membrane potential followed by complete depolarization in brain mitochondria. In contrast, liver mitochondria were less sensitive to Ca(2+); 20 microm Ca(2+) was required to depolarize liver mitochondria. Ca(2+) did not initiate oscillatory depolarizations in liver mitochondria, where each individual mitochondrion depolarized abruptly and irreversibly. Adenine nucleotides dramatically reduced the oscillatory depolarization in brain mitochondria and delayed the onset of the depolarization in liver mitochondria. In both type of mitochondria, the stabilizing effect of adenine nucleotides completely abolished by an inhibition of adenine nucleotide translocator function with carboxyatractyloside, but was not sensitive to bongkrekic acid. Inhibitors of mitochondrial permeability transition cyclosporine A and bongkrekic acid also delayed Ca(2+)-depolarization. We hypothesize that the oscillatory depolarization in brain mitochondria is associated with the transient conformational change of the adenine nucleotide translocator from a specific transporter to a non-specific pore, whereas the non-oscillatory depolarization in liver mitochondria is caused by the irreversible opening of the pore.  相似文献   

2.
Impairment of the normal spatiotemporal pattern of intracellular Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) signaling, and in particular, the transition to an irreversible "Ca(2+) overload" response, has been implicated in various pathophysiological states. In some diseases, including pancreatitis, oxidative stress has been suggested to mediate this Ca(2+) overload and the associated cell injury. We have previously demonstrated that oxidative stress with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) evokes a Ca(2+) overload response and inhibition of plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA) in rat pancreatic acinar cells (Bruce JI and Elliott AC. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 293: C938-C950, 2007). The aim of the present study was to further examine this oxidant-impaired inhibition of the PMCA, focusing on the role of the mitochondria. Using a [Ca(2+)](i) clearance assay in which mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake was blocked with Ru-360, H(2)O(2) (50 microM-1 mM) markedly inhibited the PMCA activity. This H(2)O(2)-induced inhibition of the PMCA correlated with mitochondrial depolarization (assessed using tetramethylrhodamine methylester fluorescence) but could occur without significant ATP depletion (assessed using Magnesium Green fluorescence). The H(2)O(2)-induced PMCA inhibition was sensitive to the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) inhibitors, cyclosporin-A and bongkrekic acid. These data suggest that oxidant-induced opening of the mPTP and mitochondrial depolarization may lead to an inhibition of the PMCA that is independent of mitochondrial Ca(2+) handling and ATP depletion, and we speculate that this may involve the release of a mitochondrial factor. Such a phenomenon may be responsible for the Ca(2+) overload response, and for the transition between apoptotic and necrotic cell death thought to be important in many disease states.  相似文献   

3.
The mitochondrial Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) is activated during energy-dependent Ca(2+) accumulation under conditions where there is a sustained depression of the membrane potential. This activation is not dependent on induction of the mitochondrial permeability transition. Bromoenol lactone, which inhibits the phospholipase, is effective as an inhibitor of the transition, and this action can be overcome by low levels of exogenous free fatty acids. Apparently, activation of the Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase is a factor in the mechanisms by which depolarization and Ca(2+) accumulation promote opening of the permeability transition pore. Sustained activity of the Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) promotes rupture of the outer mitochondrial membrane and spontaneous release of cytochrome c on a time scale similar to that of apoptosis occurring in cells. However, more swelling of the matrix space must occur to provoke release of a given cytochrome c fraction when the enzyme is active, compared with when it is inhibited. Through its effects on the permeability transition and release of intermembrane space proteins, the mitochondrial Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) may be an important factor governing cell death caused by necrosis or apoptosis.  相似文献   

4.
BMAP-28, a bovine antimicrobial peptide of the cathelicidin family, induces membrane permeabilization and death in human tumor cell lines and in activated, but not resting, human lymphocytes. In addition, we found that BMAP-28 causes depolarization of the inner mitochondrial membrane in single cells and in isolated mitochondria. The effect of the peptide was synergistic with that of Ca(2+) and inhibited by cyclosporine, suggesting that depolarization depends on opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. The occurrence of a permeability transition was investigated on the basis of mitochondrial permeabilization to calcein and cytochrome c release. We show that BMAP-28 permeabilizes mitochondria to entrapped calcein in a cyclosporine-sensitive manner and that it releases cytochrome c in situ. Our results demonstrate that BMAP-28 is an inducer of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore and that its cytotoxic potential depends on its effects on mitochondrial permeability.  相似文献   

5.
The permeability transition pore (PTP) is a mitochondrial inner membrane Ca(2+)-sensitive channel that plays a key role in different models of cell death. Because functional links between the PTP and the respiratory chain complex I have been reported, we have investigated the effects of rotenone on PTP regulation in U937 and KB cells. We show that rotenone was more potent than cyclosporin A at inhibiting Ca(2+)-induced PTP opening in digitonin-permeabilized cells energized with succinate. Consistent with PTP regulation by electron flux through complex I, the effect of rotenone persisted after oxidation of pyridine nucleotides by duroquinone. tert-butyl hydroperoxide induced PTP opening in intact cells (as shown by mitochondrial permeabilization to calcein and cobalt), as well as cytochrome c release and cell death. All these events were prevented by rotenone or cyclosporin A. These data demonstrate that respiratory chain complex I plays a key role in PTP regulation in vivo and confirm the importance of PTP opening in the commitment to cell death.  相似文献   

6.
In this work we examined the effect of low concentrations of Cu(2+) on the opening of the mitochondrial non-specific pore. The purpose was addressed to further contribute to the knowledge of the mechanisms that regulate the open/closed cycles of the permeability transition pore. Membrane leakage was established by measuring matrix Ca(2+) efflux and mitochondrial swelling. The experimental results indicate that Cu(2+) at very low concentrations promoted the release of accumulated Ca(2+), as well as mitochondrial swelling, provided 1,10-phenanthroline has been added. Carboxyatractyloside and Cu(2+) exhibited additive effects on these parameters. After Cu(2+) titration of membrane thiols, it might be assumed that the blockage of 5.9nmol of SH/mg protein suffices to open the non-specific pore. Taking into account the reinforcing effect of carboxyatractyloside, the increasing ADP concentrations, and that N-ethylmaleimide inhibited the Cu(2+)-induced Ca(2+) efflux, it is proposed that the target site for Cu(2+) is located in the ADP/ATP carrier.  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondria can be induced by a variety of agents/conditions to undergo a permeability transition (MPT), which nonselectively increases the permeability of the inner membrane (i.m.) to small (<1500 Da) solutes. Prooxidants are generally considered to trigger the MPT, but some investigators suggest instead that prooxidants open a Ca(2+)-selective channel in the inner mitochondrial membrane and that the opening of this channel, when coupled with Ca(2+) cycling mediated by the Ca(2+) uniporter, leads ultimately to the observed increase in mitochondrial permeability [see, e.g., Schlegel et al. (1992) Biochem. J. 285, 65]. S. A. Novgorodov and T. I. Gudz [J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. (1996) 28, 139] propose that the i.m. contains a pore that, upon exposure to prooxidants, can open to two states, one of which conducts only H(+) and one of which is the classic MPT pore. Given the current interest in increased mitochondrial permeability as a factor in apoptotic cell death, it is important to determine whether i.m. permeability is regulated in one or multiple ways and, in the latter event, to characterize each regulatory mechanism in detail. This study examined the effects of the prooxidants diamide and t-butylhydroperoxide (t-BuOOH) on the permeability of isolated rat liver mitochondria. Under the experimental conditions used, t-BuOOH induced mitochondrial swelling only in the presence of exogenous Ca(2+) (>2 microM), whereas diamide was effective in its absence. In the absence of exogenous inorganic phosphate (P(i)), (1) both prooxidants caused a collapse of the membrane potential (DeltaPsi) that preceded the onset of mitochondrial swelling; (2) cyclosporin A eliminated the swelling induced by diamide and dramatically slowed that elicited by t-BuOOH, without altering prooxidant-induced depolarization; (3) collapse of DeltaPsi was associated with Ca(2+) efflux but not with efflux of glutathione; (4) neither Ca(2+) efflux nor DeltaPsi collapse was sensitive to ruthenium red; (5) collapse of DeltaPsi was accompanied by an increase in matrix pH; no stimulation of respiration was observed; (6) Sr(2+) was able to substitute for Ca(2+) in supporting t-BuOOH-induced i.m. depolarization, but not swelling; (7) in addition to being insensitive to CsA, the collapse of DeltaPsi was also resistant to trifluoperazine, spermine, and Mg(2+), all of which block the MPT; and (8) DeltaPsi was restored (and its collapse was inhibited) upon addition of dithiothreitol, ADP, ATP or EGTA. We suggest that these results indicate that prooxidants open two channels in the i.m.: the classic MPT and a low-conductance channel with clearly distinct properties. Opening of the low-conductance channel requires sulfhydryl group oxidation and the presence of a divalent cation; both Ca(2+) and Sr(2+) are effective. The channel permits the passage of cations, including Ca(2+), but not of protons. It is insensitive to inhibitors of the classic MPT.  相似文献   

8.
We have studied the effects of idebenone on mitochondrial function in cybrids derived from one normal donor (HQB17) and one patient harboring the G3460A/MT-ND1 mutation of Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (RJ206); and in XTC.UC1 cells bearing a premature stop codon at amino acid 101 of MT-ND1 that hampers complex I assembly. Addition of idebenone to HQB17 cells caused mitochondrial depolarization and NADH depletion, which were inhibited by cyclosporin (Cs) A and decylubiquinone, suggesting an involvement of the permeability transition pore (PTP). On the other hand, addition of dithiothreitol together with idebenone did not cause PTP opening and allowed maintenance of the mitochondrial membrane potential even in the presence of rotenone. Addition of dithiothreitol plus idebenone, or of idebenol, to HQB17, RJ206 and XTC.UC1 cells sustained membrane potential in intact cells and ATP synthesis in permeabilized cells even in the presence of rotenone and malonate, and restored a good level of coupled respiration in complex I-deficient XTC.UC1 cells. These findings demonstrate that idebenol can feed electrons at complex III. If the quinone is maintained in the reduced state, a task that in some cell types appears to be performed by dicoumarol-sensitive NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 [Haefeli et al. (2011) PLoS One 6, e17963], electron transfer to complex III may allow reoxidation of NADH in complex I deficiencies.  相似文献   

9.
Mitochondria and Ca(2+)in cell physiology and pathophysiology   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Duchen MR 《Cell calcium》2000,28(5-6):339-348
There is now a consensus that mitochondria take up and accumulate Ca(2+)during physiological [Ca(2+)](c)signalling. This contribution will consider some of the functional consequences of mitochondrial Ca(2+)uptake for cell physiology and pathophysiology. The ability to remove Ca(2+)from local cytosol enables mitochondria to regulate the [Ca(2+)] in microdomains close to IP3-sensitive Ca(2+)-release channels. The [Ca(2+)] sensitivity of these channels means that, by regulating local [Ca(2+)](c), mitochondrial Ca(2+)uptake modulates the rate and extent of propagation of [Ca(2+)](c)waves in a variety of cell types. The coincidence of mitochondrial Ca(2+)uptake with oxidative stress may open the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP). This is a catastrophic event for the cell that will initiate pathways to cell death either by necrotic or apoptotic pathways. A model is presented in which illumination of an intramitochondrial fluorophore is used to generate oxygen radical species within mitochondria. This causes mitochondrial Ca(2+)loading from SR and triggers mPTP opening. In cardiomyocytes, mPTP opening leads to ATP consumption by the mitochondrial ATPase and so results in ATP depletion, rigor and necrotic cell death. In central mammalian neurons exposed to glutamate, a cellular Ca(2+)overload coincident with NO production also causes loss of mitochondrial potential and cell death, but mPTP involvement has proven more difficult to demonstrate unequivocally.  相似文献   

10.
The changes in mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsi(m)) were used as an indicator for evaluating the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) function. We found that in situ mitochondria in digitonin-permeabilized hepatocytes were coupled and responded to the addition of substrates, inhibitors and uncouplers. Ca(2+)-induced Deltapsi(m) dissipation was caused by MPTP opening because this process was inhibited by cyclosporin A. MPTP opening was enhanced by the pro-oxidant tert-butyl hydroperoxide.  相似文献   

11.
Opening of permeability transition (PT) pores in the mitochondrial inner membrane causes the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) and leads to mitochondrial swelling, membrane depolarization, and release of intramitochondrial solutes. Here, our aim was to develop high-throughput assays using a fluorescence plate reader to screen potential inducers and blockers of the MPT. Isolated rat liver mitochondria (0.5 mg/ml) were incubated in multiwell plates with tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester (TMRM, 1 microM), a potential-indicating fluorophore, and Fluo-5N (1 microM), a low-affinity Ca(2+) indicator. Incubation led to mitochondrial polarization, as indicated by uncoupler-sensitive quenching of the red TMRM fluorescence. CaCl(2) (100 microM) addition led to ruthenium red-sensitive mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake, as indicated by green Fluo-5N fluorescence. After Ca(2+) accumulation, mitochondria depolarized, released Ca(2+) into the medium, and began to swell. This swelling was monitored as a decrease in light absorbance at 620 nm. Swelling, depolarization, and Ca(2+) release were prevented by cyclosporin A (1 microM), confirming that these events represented the MPT. Measurements of Ca(2+), mitochondrial membrane potential, and swelling could be made independently from the same wells without cross interference, and all three signals could be read from every well of a 48-well plate in about 1 min. In other experiments, mitochondria were ester-loaded with carboxydichlorofluorescein (carboxy-DCF) during the isolation procedure. Release of carboxy-DCF after PT pore opening led to an unquenching of green carboxy-DCF fluorescence occurring simultaneously with swelling. By combining measurements of carboxy-DCF release, Ca(2+) uptake, membrane potential, and swelling, MPT inducers and blockers can be distinguished from uncouplers, respiratory inhibitors, and blockers of Ca(2+) uptake. This high-throughput multiwell assay is amenable for screening panels of compounds for their ability to promote or block the MPT.  相似文献   

12.
Apoptosis driven by IP(3)-linked mitochondrial calcium signals   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23       下载免费PDF全文
Increases of mitochondrial matrix [Ca(2+)] ([Ca(2+)](m)) evoked by calcium mobilizing agonists play a fundamental role in the physiological control of cellular energy metabolism. Here, we report that apoptotic stimuli induce a switch in mitochondrial calcium signalling at the beginning of the apoptotic process by facilitating Ca(2+)-induced opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP). Thus [Ca(2+)](m) signals evoked by addition of large Ca(2+) pulses or, unexpectedly, by IP(3)-mediated cytosolic [Ca(2+)] spikes trigger mitochondrial permeability transition and, in turn, cytochrome c release. IP(3)-induced opening of PTP is dependent on a privileged Ca(2+) signal transmission from IP(3) receptors to mitochondria. After the decay of Ca(2+) spikes, resealing of PTP occurs allowing mitochondrial metabolism to recover, whereas activation of caspases is triggered by cytochrome c released to the cytosol. This organization provides an efficient mechanism to establish caspase activation while mitochondrial metabolism is maintained to meet ATP requirements of apoptotic cell death.  相似文献   

13.
Falchi AM  Isola R  Diana A  Putzolu M  Diaz G 《The FEBS journal》2005,272(7):1649-1659
Depolarization and repolarization phases (D and R phases, respectively) of mitochondrial potential fluctuations induced by photoactivation of the fluorescent probe tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester (TMRM) were analyzed separately and investigated using specific inhibitors and substrates. The frequency of R phases was significantly inhibited by oligomycin and aurovertin (mitochondrial ATP synthase inhibitors), rotenone (mitochondrial complex I inhibitor) and iodoacetic acid (inhibitor of the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase). Succinic acid (mitochondrial complex II substrate, given in the permeable form of dimethyl ester) abolished the rotenone-induced inhibition of R phases. Taken together, these findings indicate that the activity of both respiratory chain and ATP synthase were required for the recovery of the mitochondrial potential. The frequency of D phases prevailed over that of R phases in all experimental conditions, resulting in a progressive depolarization of mitochondria accompanied by NAD(P)H oxidation and Ca2+ influx. D phases were not blocked by cyclosporin A (inhibitor of the permeability transition pore) or o-phenyl-EGTA (a Ca2+ chelator), suggesting that the permeability transition pore was not involved in mitochondrial potential fluctuations.  相似文献   

14.
We address the specific role of cytoplasmic Ca(2+) overload as a cell death trigger by expressing a receptor-operated specific Ca(2+) channel, vanilloid receptor subtype 1 (VR1), in Jurkat cells. Ca(2+) uptake through the VR1 channel, but not capacitative Ca(2+) influx stimulated by the muscarinic type 1 receptor, induced sustained intracellular [Ca(2+)] rises, exposure of phosphatidylserine, and cell death. Ca(2+) influx was necessary and sufficient to induce mitochondrial damage, as assessed by opening of the permeability transition pore and collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential. Ca(2+)-induced cell death was inhibited by ruthenium red, protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, or cyclosporin A treatment, as well as by Bcl-2 expression, indicating that this process requires mitochondrial calcium uptake and permeability transition pore opening. Cell death occurred without caspase activation, oligonucleosomal/50-kilobase pair DNA cleavage, or release of cytochrome c or apoptosis inducer factor from mitochondria, but it required oxidative/nitrative stress. Thus, Ca(2+) influx triggers a distinct program of mitochondrial dysfunction leading to paraptotic cell death, which does not fulfill the criteria for either apoptosis or necrosis.  相似文献   

15.
We previously reported that constitutively activated Galpha(q) (Q209L) expression in cardiomyocytes induces apoptosis through opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. We assessed the hypothesis that disturbances in Ca(2+) handling linked Galpha(q) activity to apoptosis because resting Ca(2+) levels were significantly increased prior to development of apoptosis. Treating cells with EGTA lowered Ca(2+) and blocked both loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (an indicator of permeability transition pore opening) and apoptosis (assessed by DNA fragmentation). When cytosolic Ca(2+) and mitochondrial membrane potential were simultaneously measured by confocal microscopy, sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)-driven slow Ca(2+) oscillations (time-to-peak approximately 4 s) were observed in Q209L-expressing cells. These oscillations were seen to transition into sustained increases in cytosolic Ca(2+), directly paralleled by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. Ca(2+) transients generated by caffeine-induced release of SR Ca(2+) were greatly prolonged in Q209L-expressing cells, suggesting a decreased ability to extrude Ca(2+). Indeed, the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX), which removes Ca(2+) from the cell, was markedly down-regulated at the mRNA and protein levels. Adenoviral NCX expression normalized cytosolic Ca(2+) levels and prevented DNA fragmentation in cells expressing Q209L. Interestingly, constitutively activated Akt, which rescues cells from Q209L-induced apoptosis, prevented the decrease in NCX expression, normalized cytosolic Ca(2+) levels and spontaneous Ca(2+) oscillations, shortened caffeine-induced Ca(2+) transients, and prevented loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential. Our findings demonstrate that NCX down-regulation and consequent increases in cytosolic and SR Ca(2+) can lead to Ca(2+) overloading-induced loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and suggest that recovery of Ca(2+) dysregulation is a target of Akt-mediated protection.  相似文献   

16.
Nitric oxide (NO) can trigger either necrotic or apoptotic cell death. We have used PC12 cells to investigate the extent to which NO-induced cell death is mediated by mitochondria. Addition of NO donors, 1 mM S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine (SNAP) or 1 mM diethylenetriamine-NO adduct (NOC-18), to PC12 cells resulted in a steady-state level of 1-3 microM: NO, rapid and almost complete inhibition of cellular respiration (within 1 min), and a rapid decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential within the cells. A 24-h incubation of PC12 cells with NO donors (SNAP or NOC-18) or specific inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration (myxothiazol, rotenone, or azide), in the absence of glucose, caused total ATP depletion and resulted in 80-100% necrosis. The presence of glucose almost completely prevented the decrease in ATP level and the increase in necrosis induced by the NO donors or mitochondrial inhibitors, suggesting that the NO-induced necrosis in the absence of glucose was due to the inhibition of mitochondrial respiration and subsequent ATP depletion. However, in the presence of glucose, NO donors and mitochondrial inhibitors induced apoptosis of PC12 cells as determined by nuclear morphology. The presence of apoptotic cells was prevented completely by benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-fluoromethyl ketone (a nonspecific caspase inhibitor), indicating that apoptosis was mediated by caspase activation. Indeed, both NO donors and mitochondrial inhibitors in PC12 cells caused the activation of caspase-3- and caspase-3-processing-like proteases. Caspase-1 activity was not activated. Cyclosporin A (an inhibitor of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore) decreased the activity of caspase-3- and caspase-3-processing-like proteases after treatment with NO donors, but was not effective in the case of the mitochondrial inhibitors. The activation of caspases was accompanied by the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytosol, which was partially prevented by cyclosporin A in the case of NO donors. These results indicate that NO donors (SNAP or NOC-18) may trigger apoptosis in PC12 cells partially mediated by opening the mitochondrial permeability transition pores, release of cytochrome c, and subsequent caspase activation. NO-induced apoptosis is blocked completely in the absence of glucose, probably due to the lack of ATP. Our findings suggest that mitochondria may be involved in both types of cell death induced by NO donors: necrosis by respiratory inhibition and apoptosis by opening the permeability transition pore. Further, our results indicate that the mode of cell death (necrosis versus apoptosis) induced by either NO or mitochondrial inhibitors depends critically on the glycolytic capacity of the cell.  相似文献   

17.
Ca(2+)-release from rat liver mitochondria after protonophore (carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, CCCP)-induced membrane depolarisation is studied. It is shown that the release of calcium is accompanied by an increase of the inner mitochondrial membrane permeability as the result of the opening of permeability transition pore (PTP). Calcium is released from mitochondria through the uniporter working in reverse mode and also by PTP mechanism which accounts for ruthenium red (RR)-insensitive component of total. Ca(2+)-release. Unlike Ca2+, the strontium release from the mitochondria is completely sensitive to RR, specific uniporter blocker, which shows the absence of rapid Sr(2+)-efflux mechanisms other than uniporter of bivalent cations. The data obtained also give an evidence that the lifetime of the open state of the pore is limited, and barrier properties of the mitochondrial membrane are restored after the closure of the pore.  相似文献   

18.
We have characterized the effects of the antimitotic drug paclitaxel (Taxol(TM)) on the Ca(2+) signaling cascade of terminally differentiated mouse pancreatic acinar cells. Using single cell fluorescence techniques and whole-cell patch clamping to record cytosolic Ca(2+) and plasma membrane Ca(2+)-dependent Cl(-) currents, we find that paclitaxel abolishes cytosolic Ca(2+) oscillations and in more than half of the cells it also induces a rapid, transient cytosolic Ca(2+) response. This response is not affected by removal of extracellular Ca(2+) indicating that paclitaxel releases Ca(2+) from an intracellular Ca(2+) store. Using saponin-permeabilized cells, we show that paclitaxel does not affect Ca(2+) release from an inositol trisphosphate-sensitive store. Furthermore, up to 15 min after paclitaxel application, there is no significant effect on either microtubule organization or on endoplasmic reticulum organization. The data suggest a non-endoplasmic reticulum source for the intracellular Ca(2+) response. Using the mitochondrial fluorescent dyes, JC-1 and Rhod-2, we show that paclitaxel evoked a rapid decline in the mitochondrial membrane potential and a loss of mitochondrial Ca(2+). Cyclosporin A, a blocker of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, blocked both the paclitaxel-induced loss of mitochondrial Ca(2+) and the effect on Ca(2+) spikes. We conclude that paclitaxel exerts rapid effects on the cytosolic Ca(2+) signal via the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. This work indicates that some of the more rapidly developing side effects of chemotherapy might be due to an action of antimitotic drugs on mitochondrial function and an interference with the Ca(2+) signal cascade.  相似文献   

19.
Dahlem YA  Wolf G  Siemen D  Horn TF 《Cell calcium》2006,39(5):387-400
The permeability transition pore (PTP) and the ATP-dependent potassium (mtK-ATP) channel of mitochondria are known to play key roles in mitochondrially mediated apoptosis. We investigated how modulation of the permeability transition pore (PTP) and the ATP-dependent potassium (mtK-ATP) channel, either as single elements or in combination, affects the proapoptotic intracellular calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) transients and the mitochondrial membrane potential (psi(m)). For this purpose a model was established exploring the [Ca(2+)](i) transients in N2A cells using continuous application of ATP that causes a biphasic [Ca(2+)](i) response. This response was sensitive to endoplasmatic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) depletion and a smooth ER Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA) antagonist. PTP inhibition by cyclosporine A (CsA) or its non-immunosuppressive derivative NIM811 caused an amplification of the secondary [Ca(2+)](i) peak and induced a hyperpolarization of psi(m). Both the putative mtK-ATP channel inhibitor 5-hydroxydecanoate (5-HD) and the opener diazoxide ameliorated the ATP-induced secondary [Ca(2+)](i) peak. The effect of diazoxide was accompanied by a depolarization of psi(m) whereas 5-HD had no effect on psi(m). When diazoxide and CsA or NIM811 were applied together the secondary [Ca(2+)](i) rise did not return to baseline and a not significant hyperpolarization of psi(m) was observed. So, simultaneous inhibition of PTP and activation of the mtK-ATP channel prevents the increased slope of the secondary [Ca(2+)](i) peak induced by CsA (or NIM811) and also the depolarization after diazoxide application. Hence, we propose that modulation of one of these channels leads to functional changes of the other channel by means of Delta[Ca(2+)](i) and Deltapsi(m).  相似文献   

20.
Imaging the permeability pore transition in single mitochondria.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
In mitochondria the opening of a large proteinaceous pore, the "mitochondrial permeability transition pore" (MTP), is known to occur under conditions of oxidative stress and matrix calcium overload. MTP opening and the resulting cellular energy deprivation have been implicated in processes such as hypoxic cell damage, apoptosis, and neuronal excitotoxicity. Membrane potential (delta psi(m)) in single isolated heart mitochondria was measured by confocal microscopy with a voltage-sensitive fluorescent dye. Measurements in mitochondrial populations revealed a gradual loss of delta psi(m) due to the light-induced generation of free radicals. In contrast, the depolarization in individual mitochondria was fast, sometimes causing marked oscillations of delta psi(m). Rapid depolarizations were accompanied by an increased permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane to matrix-entrapped calcein (approximately 620 Da), indicating the opening of a large membrane pore. The MTP inhibitor cyclosporin A significantly stabilized delta psi(m) in single mitochondria, thereby slowing the voltage decay in averaged recordings. We conclude that the spontaneous depolarizations were caused by repeated stochastic openings and closings of the transition pore. The data demonstrate a much more dynamic regulation of membrane permeability at the level of a single organelle than predicted from ensemble behavior of mitochondrial populations.  相似文献   

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