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1.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release in striated muscle is mediated by a multiprotein complex that includes the ryanodine receptor (RyR) Ca2+ channel and the intra-SR Ca2+ buffering protein calsequestrin (CSQ). Besides its buffering role, CSQ is thought to regulate RyR channel function. Here, CSQ-dependent luminal Ca2+ regulation of skeletal (RyR1) and cardiac (RyR2) channels is explored. Skeletal (CSQ1) or cardiac (CSQ2) calsequestrin were systematically added to the luminal side of single RyR1 or RyR2 channels. The luminal Ca2+ dependence of open probability (Po) over the physiologically relevant range (0.05-1 mM Ca2+) was defined for each of the four RyR/CSQ isoform pairings. We found that the luminal Ca2+ sensitivity of single RyR2 channels was substantial when either CSQ isoform was present. In contrast, no significant luminal Ca2+ sensitivity of single RyR1 channels was detected in the presence of either CSQ isoform. We conclude that CSQ-dependent luminal Ca2+ regulation of single RyR2 channels lacks CSQ isoform specificity, and that CSQ-dependent luminal Ca2+ regulation in skeletal muscle likely plays a relatively minor (if any) role in regulating the RyR1 channel activity, indicating that the chief role of CSQ1 in this tissue is as an intra-SR Ca2+ buffer.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Calcium (Ca2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) is widely accepted as the principal mechanism linking electrical excitation and mechanical contraction in cardiac cells. The CICR mechanism has been understood mainly based on binding of cytosolic Ca2+ with ryanodine receptors (RyRs) and inducing Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). However, recent experiments suggest that SR lumenal Ca2+ may also participate in regulating RyR gating through calsequestrin (CSQ), the SR lumenal Ca2+ buffer. We investigate how SR Ca2+ release via RyR is regulated by Ca2+ and calsequestrin (CSQ). First, a mathematical model of RyR kinetics is derived based on experimental evidence. We assume that the RyR has three binding sites, two cytosolic sites for Ca2+ activation and inactivation, and one SR lumenal site for CSQ binding. The open probability (Po) of the RyR is found by simulation under controlled cytosolic and SR lumenal Ca2+. Both peak and steady-state Po effectively increase as SR lumenal Ca2+ increases. Second, we incorporate the RyR model into a CICR model that has both a diadic space and the junctional SR (jSR). At low jSR Ca2+ loads, CSQs are more likely to bind with the RyR and act to inhibit jSR Ca2+ release, while at high SR loads CSQs are more likely to detach from the RyR, thereby increasing jSR Ca2+ release. Furthermore, this CICR model produces a nonlinear relationship between fractional jSR Ca2+ release and jSR load. These findings agree with experimental observations in lipid bilayers and cardiac myocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Summary

In this work we show that ryanodine binding to junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes or purified ryanodine receptor (RyR) is inhibited in a time — and concentration-dependent fashion by prior treatment with the carboxyl reagent dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). Exposure of the membrane-bound RyR to the water soluble carboxyl reagents 1-ethyl-3 (3-(dimethylamino) propyl carbodiimide (EDC) or N-ethyl-pheny-lisoxazolium-3 -sulfonate (WRK) only slightly affects their ryanodine binding capacity. The amphipathic reagent N-ethoxy cabonyl-2-ethoxy-1, 2-dihydroquinaline (EEDQ) inhibited ryanodine binding at relatively high concentrations. DCCD-modifica-tion of the SR decreased the binding affinities of the RyR for ryanodine and Ca2+ by about 3- and 18-fold, respectively.

The single channel activity of SR membranes modified with DCCD and then incorporated into planar lipid bilayers is very low (5–8%) in comparison to control membranes. Application of DCCD to either the myoplasmic (c/s) or luminal (trans) side of the reconstituted unmodified channels resulted in complete inhibition of their single channel activities. Similar results were obtained with the water soluble reagent WRK applied to the myoplasmic, but not to the luminal side. The DCCD-modified non-active channel is re-activated by addition of ryanodine in the presence of 250üM Ca2+ and is stabilized in a sub-conductance state. With caffeine, ryanodine re-activated the channel in the presence of 100üM of Ca2+. The results suggest that a carboxyl residue(s) in the RyR is involved either in the binding of Ca2+, or in conformational changes that are produced by Ca2+ binding, and are required for the binding of ryanodine and the opening of the Ca2+ release channel.  相似文献   

5.
The Ca2+ transport ATPase (SERCA) of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) plays an important role in muscle cytosolic signaling, as it stores Ca2+ in intracellular membrane bound compartments, thereby lowering cytosolic Ca2+ to induce relaxation. The stored Ca2+ is in turn released upon membrane excitation to trigger muscle contraction. SERCA is activated by high affinity binding of cytosolic Ca2+, whereupon ATP is utilized by formation of a phosphoenzyme intermediate, which undergoes protein conformational transitions yielding reduced affinity and vectorial translocation of bound Ca2+. We review here biochemical and biophysical evidence demonstrating that release of bound Ca2+ into the lumen of SR requires Ca2+/H+ exchange at the low affinity Ca2+ sites. Rise of lumenal Ca2+ above its dissociation constant from low affinity sites, or reduction of the H+ concentration by high pH, prevent Ca2+/H+ exchange. Under these conditions Ca2+ release into the lumen of SR is bypassed, and hydrolytic cleavage of phosphoenzyme may yield uncoupled ATPase cycles. We clarify how such Ca2+pump slippage does not occur within the time length of muscle twitches, but under special conditions and in special cells may contribute to thermogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
Combined patch-clamp and Fura-2 measurements were performed on chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells co-expressing two channel proteins involved in skeletal muscle excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling, the ryanodine receptor (RyR)-Ca2+ release channel (in the membrane of internal Ca2+ stores) and the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR)-Ca2+ channel (in the plasma membrane). To ensure expression of functional L-type Ca2+ channels, we expressed α2, β, and γ DHPR subunits and a chimeric DHPR α1 subunit in which the putative cytoplasmic loop between repeats II and III is of skeletal origin and the remainder is cardiac. There was no clear indication of skeletal-type coupling between the DHPR and the RyR; depolarization failed to induce a Ca2+ transient (CaT) in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]o). However, in the presence of [Ca2+]o, depolarization evoked CaTs with a bell-shaped voltage dependence. About 30% of the cells tested exhibited two kinetic components: a fast transient increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) (the first component; reaching 95% of its peak <0.6 s after depolarization) followed by a second increase in [Ca2+]i which lasted for 5–10 s (the second component). Our results suggest that the first component primarily reflected Ca2+ influx through Ca2+ channels, whereas the second component resulted from Ca2+ release through the RyR expressed in the membrane of internal Ca2+ stores. However, the onset and the rate of Ca2+ release appeared to be much slower than in native cardiac myocytes, despite a similar activation rate of Ca2+ current. These results suggest that the skeletal muscle RyR isoform supports Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release but that the distance between the DHPRs and the RyRs is, on average, much larger in the cotransfected CHO cells than in cardiac myocytes. We conclude that morphological properties of T-tubules and/or proteins other than the DHPR and the RyR are required for functional “close coupling” like that observed in skeletal or cardiac muscle. Nevertheless, some of our results imply that these two channels are potentially able to directly interact with each other.  相似文献   

7.
To clarify whether activity of the ryanodine receptor type 2 (RyR2) is reduced in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of cardiac muscle, as is the case with the ryanodine receptor type 1 (RyR1), Ca2+-dependent [3H]ryanodine binding, a biochemical measure of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR), was determined using SR vesicle fractions isolated from rabbit and rat cardiac muscles. In the absence of an adenine nucleotide or caffeine, the rat SR showed a complicated Ca2+ dependence, instead of the well-documented biphasic dependence of the rabbit SR. In the rat SR, [3H]ryanodine binding initially increased as [Ca2+] increased, with a plateau in the range of 10–100 µM Ca2+, and thereafter further increased to an apparent peak around 1 mM Ca2+, followed by a decrease. In the presence of these modulators, this complicated dependence prevailed, irrespective of the source. Addition of 0.3–1 mM Mg2+ unexpectedly increased the binding two- to threefold and enhanced the affinity for [3H]ryanodine at 10–100 µM Ca2+, resulting in the well-known biphasic dependence. In other words, the partial suppression of RyR2 is relieved by Mg2+. Ca2+ could be a substitute for Mg2+. Mg2+ also amplifies the responses of RyR2 to inhibitory and stimulatory modulators. This stimulating effect of Mg2+ on RyR2 is entirely new, and is referred to as the third effect, in addition to the well-known dual inhibitory effects. This effect is critical to describe the role of RyR2 in excitation-contraction coupling of cardiac muscle, in view of the intracellular Mg2+ concentration. [3H]ryanodine binding; CICR; stimulation by physiological Mg2+, excitation-contraction coupling in the heart  相似文献   

8.
Diabetic cardiomyopathy is characterized by delayed cardiac relaxation. Delayed relaxation is suggested to be associated with sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) dysfunction and/or increase in myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+. Although MCC-135, an intracellular Ca2+-handling modulator, accelerates the delayed relaxation without inotropic effect in the ventricular muscle isolated from rats with diabetic cardiomyopathy, the underlying mechanism has not been fully understood. We tested the hypotheses that MCC-135 modulates Ca2+ uptake by SR and myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+. Wistar rats were made diabetic by a single injection of streptozotocin (40 mg/kg i.v.). Seven months later, the left ventricular papillary muscle was isolated and skinned fibers with and without functional SR were prepared by treatment of the papillary muscle with saponin to study SR Ca2+ uptake and myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+, respectively. In diabetic rats, SR Ca2+ uptake was decreased, which was related to decrease in protein level of SR Ca2+-ATPase determined by western blot analysis. MCC-135 enhanced SR Ca2+ uptake in diabetic rats, but not in normal rats. In diabetic rats, maximum force was decreased but force at diastolic level of Ca2+ was increased, without significant change in myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+ compared with normal rats. MCC-135 decreased force at any pCa tested (pCa 7.0-4.4), but had no significant effect on myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+ in diabetic rats. These results suggest that MCC-135 enhances SR Ca2+ uptake and shifts force-pCa curve downward without modulating myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+. These effects may contribute to positive lusitropic effect without inotropic effect of MCC-135 observed in the ventricular muscle of diabetic cardiomyopathy.  相似文献   

9.
The association of an endogenous, Ca2+-dependent cysteine-protease with the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is demonstrated. The activity of this protease is strongly stimulated by dithiothreitol (DTT), cysteine and β-mercaptoethanol, and is inhibited by iodoacetamide, mercuric chloride and leupeptin, but not by PMSF. The activity of this thiol-protease is dependent on Ca2+ with half-maximal activity obtained at 0.1 μm and maximal activity at 10 μm. Mg2+ is also an activator of this enzyme (CI50=22 μm). These observations, together with the neutral pH optima and inhibition by the calpain I inhibitor, suggest that this enzyme is of calpain I type. This protease specifically cleaves the ryanodine receptor monomer (510 kD) at one site to produce two fragments with apparent molecular masses of 375 and 150 kD. The proteolytic fragments remain associated as shown by purification of the cleaved ryanodine receptor. The calpain binding site is identified as a PEST (proline, glutamic acid, serine, threonine-rich) region in the amino acid sequence GTPGGTPQPGVE, at positions 1356–1367 of the RyR and the cleavage site, the calmodulin binding site, at residues 1383–1400. The RyR cleavage by the Ca2+-dependent thiol-protease is prevented in the presence of ATP (1–5 mm) and by high NaCl concentrations. This cleavage of the RyR has no effect on ryanodine binding activity but stimulates Ca2+ efflux. A possible involvement of this specific cleavage of the RyR/Ca2+ release channel in the control of calpain activity is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
《Cell calcium》2010,47(5-6):313-322
In vascular smooth muscle cells, Ca2+ release via IP3 receptors (IP3R) and ryanodine receptors (RyR) on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ store contributes significantly to the regulation of cellular events such as gene regulation, growth and contraction. Ca2+ release from various regions of a structurally compartmentalized SR, it is proposed, may selectively activate different cellular functions. Multiple SR compartments with various receptor arrangements are proposed also to exist at different stages of smooth muscle development and in proliferative vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis. The conclusions on SR organization have been derived largely from the outcome of functional studies. This study addresses whether the SR Ca2+ store is a single continuous interconnected network or multiple separate Ca2+ pools in single vascular myocytes. To do this, the consequences of depletion of the SR in small restricted regions on the Ca2+ available throughout the store was examined using localized photolysis of caged-IP3 and focal application of ryanodine in guinea-pig voltage-clamped single portal vein myocytes. From one small site on the cell, the entire SR could be depleted via either RyR or IP3R. The entire SR could also be refilled from one small site on the cell. The results suggest a single luminally continuous SR exists. However, the opening of IP3R and RyR was regulated by the Ca2+ concentration within the SR (luminal [Ca2+]). As the luminal [Ca2+] declines, the opening of the receptors decline and stop, and there may appear to be stores with either only RyR or only IP3R. The SR Ca2+ store is a single luminally continuous entity which contains both IP3R and RyR and within which Ca2+ is accessed freely by each receptor. While the SR is a single continuous entity, regulation of IP3R and RyR by luminal [Ca2+] explains the appearance of multiple stores in some functional studies.  相似文献   

11.
Of the major cellular antioxidant defenses, glutathione (GSH) is particularly important in maintaining the cytosolic redox potential. Whereas the healthy myocardium is maintained at a highly reduced redox state, it has been proposed that oxidation of GSH can affect the dynamics of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release. In this study, we used multiple approaches to define the effects of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) on ryanodine receptor (RyR)-mediated Ca2+ release in rabbit ventricular myocytes. To investigate the role of GSSG on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release induced by the action potential, we used the thiol-specific oxidant diamide to increase intracellular GSSG in intact myocytes. To more directly assess the effect of GSSG on RyR activity, we introduced GSSG within the cytosol of permeabilized myocytes. RyR-mediated Ca2+ release from the SR was significantly enhanced in the presence of GSSG. This resulted in decreased steady-state diastolic [Ca2+]SR, increased SR Ca2+ fractional release, and increased spark- and non-spark-mediated SR Ca2+ leak. Single-channel recordings from RyR’s incorporated into lipid bilayers revealed that GSSG significantly increased RyR activity. Moreover, oxidation of RyR in the form of intersubunit crosslinking was present in intact myocytes treated with diamide and permeabilized myocytes treated with GSSG. Blocking RyR crosslinking with the alkylating agent N-ethylmaleimide prevented depletion of SR Ca2+ load induced by diamide. These findings suggest that elevated cytosolic GSSG enhances SR Ca2+ leak due to redox-dependent intersubunit RyR crosslinking. This effect can contribute to abnormal SR Ca2+ handling during periods of oxidative stress.  相似文献   

12.
Skeletal muscle fibres support store-operated Ca2+-entry (SOCE) across the t-tubular membrane upon exhaustive depletion of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Recently we demonstrated the presence of a novel mode of SOCE activated under conditions of maintained [Ca2+]SR. This phasic SOCE manifested in a fast and transient manner in synchrony with excitation contraction (EC)-coupling mediated SR Ca2+-release (Communications Biology 1:31, doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-018-0033-7). Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) and calcium release-activated calcium channel 1 (ORAI1), positioned at the SR and t-system membranes, respectively, are the considered molecular correlate of SOCE. The evidence suggests that at the triads, where the terminal cisternae of the SR sandwich a t-tubule, STIM1 and ORAI1 proteins pre-position to allow for enhanced SOCE transduction.Here we show that phasic SOCE is not only shaped by global [Ca2+]SR but provide evidence for a local activation within nanodomains at the terminal cisternae of the SR. This feature may allow SOCE to modulate [Ca2+]SR during EC coupling. We define SOCE to occur on the same timescale as EC coupling and determine the temporal coherence of SOCE activation to SR Ca2+ release. We derive a delay of 0.3 ms reflecting diffusive Ca2+-equilibration at the luminal ryanodine receptor 1 (RyR1) channel mouth upon SR Ca2+-release. Numerical simulations of Ca2+-calsequestrin binding estimates a characteristic diffusion length and confines an upper limit for the spatial distance between STIM1 and RyR1. Experimental evidence for a 4- fold change in t-system Ca2+-permeability upon prolonged electrical stimulation in conjunction with numerical simulations of Ca2+-STIM1 binding suggests a Ca2+ dissociation constant of STIM1 below 0.35 mM. Our results show that phasic SOCE is intimately linked with RyR opening and closing, with only μs delays, because [Ca2+] in the terminal cisternae is just above the threshold for Ca2+ dissociation from STIM1 under physiological resting conditions.This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: ECS Meeting edited by Claus Heizmann, Joachim Krebs and Jacques Haiech.  相似文献   

13.
Ca2+-dependent inhibition of native and isolated ryanodine receptor (RyR) calcium release channels from sheep heart and rabbit skeletal muscle was investigated using the lipid bilayer technique. We found that cytoplasmic Ca2+ inhibited cardiac RyRs with an average K m = 15 mm, skeletal RyRs with K m = 0.7 mm and with Hill coefficients of 2 in both isoforms. This is consistent with measurements of Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) in skinned fibers and with [3H]-ryanodine binding to SR vesicles, but is contrary to previous bilayer studies which were unable to demonstrate Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac RyRs (Chu, Fill, Stefani &; Entman (1993) J. Membrane Biol. 135, 49–59). Ryanodine prevented Ca2+ from inhibiting either cardiac or skeletal RyRs. Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac RyRs appeared to be the most fragile characteristic of channel function, being irreversibly disrupted by 500 mm Cs+, but not by 500 mm K+, in the cis bath or by solublization with the detergent CHAPS. These treatments had no effect on channel regulation by AMP-PNP, caffeine, ryanodine, ruthenium red, or Ca2+-activation. Ca2+-inhibition in skeletal RyRs was retained in the presence of 500 mm Cs+. Our results provide an explanation for previous findings in which cardiac RyRs in bilayers with 250 mm Cs+ in the solutions fail to demonstrate Ca2+-inhibition, while Ca2+-inhibition of Ca2+ release is observed in vesicle studies where K+ is the major cation. A comparison of open and closed probability distributions from individual RyRs suggested that the same gating mechanism mediates Ca2+-inhibition in skeletal RyRs and cardiac RyRs, with different Ca2+ affinities for inhibition. We conclude that differences in the Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac and skeletal channels depends on their Ca2+ binding properties.  相似文献   

14.
Single channel properties of cardiac and fast-twitch skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) release channels were compared in a planar bilayer by fusing SR membranes in a Cs+-conducting medium. We found that the pharmacology, Cs+ conductance and selectivity to monovalent and divalent cations of the two channels were similar. The cardiac SR channel exhibited multiple kinetic states. The open and closed lifetimes were not altered from a range of 10–7 to 10–3 M Ca2+, but the proportion of closed and open states shifted to shorter closings and openings, respectively.However, while the single channel activity of the skeletal SR channel was activated and inactivated by micromolar and millimolar Ca2+, respectively, the cardiac SR channel remained activated in the presence of high [Ca2+]. In correlation to these studies, [3H]ryanodine binding by the receptors of the two channel receptors was inhibited by high [Ca2+] in skeletal but not in cardiac membranes in the presence of adenine nucleotides. There is, however, a minor inhibition of [3H]ryanodine binding of cardiac SR at millimolar Ca2+ in the absence of adenine nucleotides.When Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release was examined from preloaded native SR vesicles, the release rates followed a normal biphasic curve, with Ca2+-induced inactivation at high [Ca2+] for both cardiac and skeletal SR. Our data suggest that the molecular basis of regulation of the SR Ca2+ release channel in cardiac and skeletal muscle is different, and that the cardiac SR channel isoform lacks a Ca2+-inactivated site.This work was supported by research grants from the National Institutes of Health HL13870 and AR38970, and the Texas Affiliate of the American Heart Association, 91A-188. M. Fill was the recipient of an NIH fellowship AR01834.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The charge translocation associated with sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ efflux is compensated for by a simultaneous SR K+ influx. This influx is essential because, with no countercurrent, the SR membrane potential (Vm) would quickly (<1 ms) reach the Ca2+ equilibrium potential and SR Ca2+ release would cease. The SR K+ trimeric intracellular cation (TRIC) channel has been proposed to carry the essential countercurrent. However, the ryanodine receptor (RyR) itself also carries a substantial K+ countercurrent during release. To better define the physiological role of the SR K+ channel, we compared SR Ca2+ transport in saponin-permeabilized cardiomyocytes before and after limiting SR K+ channel function. Specifically, we reduced SR K+ channel conduction 35 and 88% by replacing cytosolic K+ for Na+ or Cs+ (respectively), changes that have little effect on RyR function. Calcium sparks, SR Ca2+ reloading, and caffeine-evoked Ca2+ release amplitude (and rate) were unaffected by these ionic changes. Our results show that countercurrent carried by SR K+ (TRIC) channels is not required to support SR Ca2+ release (or uptake). Because K+ enters the SR through RyRs during release, the SR K+ (TRIC) channel most likely is needed to restore trans-SR K+ balance after RyRs close, assuring SR Vm stays near 0 mV.  相似文献   

17.
In cardiomyocytes, Ca2+ entry through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCCs) binds to and activates RyR2 channels, resulting in subsequent Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and cardiac contraction. Previous research has documented the molecular coupling of small-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (SK channels) to VDCCs in mouse cardiac muscle. Little is known regarding the role of RyRs-sensitive Ca2+ release in the SK channels in cardiac muscle. In this study, using whole-cell patch clamp techniques, we observed that a Ca2+-activated K+ current (IK,Ca) recorded from isolated adult C57B/L mouse atrial myocytes was significantly decreased by ryanodine, an inhibitor of ryanodine receptor type 2 (RyR2), or by the co-application of ryanodine and thapsigargin, an inhibitor of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) (p<0.05, p<0.01, respectively). The activation of RyR2 by caffeine increased the IK,Ca in the cardiac cells (p<0.05, p<0.01, respectively). We further analyzed the effect of RyR2 knockdown on IK,Ca and Ca2+ in isolated adult mouse cardiomyocytes using a whole-cell patch clamp technique and confocal imaging. RyR2 knockdown in mouse atrial cells transduced with lentivirus-mediated small hairpin interference RNA (shRNA) exhibited a significant decrease in IK,Ca (p<0.05) and [Ca2+]i fluorescence intensity (p<0.01). An immunoprecipitated complex of SK2 and RyR2 was identified in native cardiac tissue by co-immunoprecipitation assays. Our findings indicate that RyR2-mediated Ca2+ release is responsible for the activation and modulation of SK channels in cardiac myocytes.  相似文献   

18.
The ryanodine receptor (RyR)/Ca2+ release channel is an essential component of excitation–contraction coupling in striated muscle cells. To study the function and regulation of the Ca2+ release channel, we tested the effect of caffeine on the full-length and carboxyl-terminal portion of skeletal muscle RyR expressed in a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell line. Caffeine induced openings of the full length RyR channels in a concentration-dependent manner, but it had no effect on the carboxyl-terminal RyR channels. CHO cells expressing the carboxyl-terminal RyR proteins displayed spontaneous changes of intracellular [Ca2+]. Unlike the native RyR channels in muscle cells, which display localized Ca2+ release events (i.e., “Ca2+ sparks” in cardiac muscle and “local release events” in skeletal muscle), CHO cells expressing the full length RyR proteins did not exhibit detectable spontaneous or caffeine-induced local Ca2+ release events. Our data suggest that the binding site for caffeine is likely to reside within the amino-terminal portion of RyR, and the localized Ca2+ release events observed in muscle cells may involve gating of a group of Ca2+ release channels and/or interaction of RyR with muscle-specific proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) by elevating cytosolic Ca2+ is a central step in the process of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release, but the molecular basis of RyR2 activation by cytosolic Ca2+ is poorly defined. It has been proposed recently that the putative Ca2+ binding domain encompassing a pair of EF-hand motifs (EF1 and EF2) in the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RyR1) functions as a Ca2+ sensor that regulates the gating of RyR1. Although the role of the EF-hand domain in RyR1 function has been studied extensively, little is known about the functional significance of the corresponding EF-hand domain in RyR2. Here we investigate the effect of mutations in the EF-hand motifs on the Ca2+ activation of RyR2. We found that mutations in the EF-hand motifs or deletion of the entire EF-hand domain did not affect the Ca2+-dependent activation of [3H]ryanodine binding or the cytosolic Ca2+ activation of RyR2. On the other hand, deletion of the EF-hand domain markedly suppressed the luminal Ca2+ activation of RyR2 and spontaneous Ca2+ release in HEK293 cells during store Ca2+ overload or store overload-induced Ca2+ release (SOICR). Furthermore, mutations in the EF2 motif, but not EF1 motif, of RyR2 raised the threshold for SOICR termination, whereas deletion of the EF-hand domain of RyR2 increased both the activation and termination thresholds for SOICR. These results indicate that, although the EF-hand domain is not required for RyR2 activation by cytosolic Ca2+, it plays an important role in luminal Ca2+ activation and SOICR.  相似文献   

20.
Ryanodine receptor (RyR) type 1 (RyR1) exhibits a markedly lower gain of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) activity than RyR type 3 (RyR3) in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of mammalian skeletal muscle (selective stabilization of the RyR1 channel), and this reduction in the gain is largely eliminated using 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid (CHAPS). We have investigated whether the hypothesized interdomain interactions within RyR1 are involved in the selective stabilization of the channel using [3H]ryanodine binding, single-channel recordings, and Ca2+ release from the SR vesicles. Like CHAPS, domain peptide 4 (DP4, a synthetic peptide corresponding to the Leu2442-Pro2477 region of RyR1), which seems to destabilize the interdomain interactions, markedly stimulated RyR1 but not RyR3. Their activating effects were saturable and nonadditive. Dantrolene, a potent inhibitor of RyR1 used to treat malignant hyperthermia, reversed the effects of DP4 or CHAPS in an identical manner. These findings indicate that RyR1 is activated by DP4 and CHAPS through a common mechanism that is probably mediated by the interdomain interactions. DP4 greatly increased [3H]ryanodine binding to RyR1 with only minor alterations in the sensitivity to endogenous CICR modulators (Ca2+, Mg2+, and adenine nucleotide). However, DP4 sensitized RyR1 four- to six-fold to caffeine in the caffeine-induced Ca2+ release. Thus the gain of CICR activity critically determines the magnitude and threshold of Ca2+ release by drugs such as caffeine. These findings suggest that the low CICR gain of RyR1 is important in normal Ca2+ handling in skeletal muscle and that perturbation of this state may result in muscle diseases such as malignant hyperthermia. malignant hyperthermia; 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]propane sulfonic acid; domain peptide 4  相似文献   

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