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1.
Ca(2+) sparks are highly localized cytosolic Ca(2+) transients caused by a release of Ca(2+) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum via ryanodine receptors (RyRs); they are the elementary events underlying global changes in Ca(2+) in skeletal and cardiac muscle. In smooth muscle and some neurons, Ca(2+) sparks activate large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (BK channels) in the spark microdomain, causing spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) that regulate membrane potential and, hence, voltage-gated channels. Using the fluorescent Ca(2+) indicator fluo-3 and a high speed widefield digital imaging system, it was possible to capture the total increase in fluorescence (i.e., the signal mass) during a spark in smooth muscle cells, which is the first time such a direct approach has been used in any system. The signal mass is proportional to the total quantity of Ca(2+) released into the cytosol, and its rate of rise is proportional to the Ca(2+) current flowing through the RyRs during a spark (I(Ca(spark))). Thus, Ca(2+) currents through RyRs can be monitored inside the cell under physiological conditions. Since the magnitude of I(Ca(spark)) in different sparks varies more than fivefold, Ca(2+) sparks appear to be caused by the concerted opening of a number of RyRs. Sparks with the same underlying Ca(2+) current cause STOCs, whose amplitudes vary more than threefold, a finding that is best explained by variability in coupling ratio (i.e., the ratio of RyRs to BK channels in the spark microdomain). The time course of STOC decay is approximated by a single exponential that is independent of the magnitude of signal mass and has a time constant close to the value of the mean open time of the BK channels, suggesting that STOC decay reflects BK channel kinetics, rather than the time course of [Ca(2+)] decline at the membrane. Computer simulations were carried out to determine the spatiotemporal distribution of the Ca(2+) concentration resulting from the measured range of I(Ca(spark)). At the onset of a spark, the Ca(2+) concentration within 200 nm of the release site reaches a plateau or exceeds the [Ca(2+)](EC50) for the BK channels rapidly in comparison to the rate of rise of STOCs. These findings suggest a model in which the BK channels lie close to the release site and are exposed to a saturating [Ca(2+)] with the rise and fall of the STOCs determined by BK channel kinetics. The mechanism of signaling between RyRs and BK channels may provide a model for Ca(2+) action on a variety of molecular targets within cellular microdomains.  相似文献   

2.
Ca(2+) sparks are small, localized cytosolic Ca(2+) transients due to Ca(2+) release from sarcoplasmic reticulum through ryanodine receptors. In smooth muscle, Ca(2+) sparks activate large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (BK channels) in the spark microdomain, thus generating spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs). The purpose of the present study is to determine experimentally the level of Ca(2+) to which the BK channels are exposed during a spark. Using tight seal, whole-cell recording, we have analyzed the voltage-dependence of the STOC conductance (g((STOC))), and compared it to the voltage-dependence of BK channel activation in excised patches in the presence of different [Ca(2+)]s. The Ca(2+) sparks did not change in amplitude over the range of potentials of interest. In contrast, the magnitude of g((STOC)) remained roughly constant from 20 to -40 mV and then declined steeply at more negative potentials. From this and the voltage dependence of BK channel activation, we conclude that the BK channels underlying STOCs are exposed to a mean [Ca(2+)] on the order of 10 microM during a Ca(2+) spark. The membrane area over which a concentration > or =10 microM is reached has an estimated radius of 150-300 nm, corresponding to an area which is a fraction of one square micron. Moreover, given the constraints imposed by the estimated channel density and the Ca(2+) current during a spark, the BK channels do not appear to be uniformly distributed over the membrane but instead are found at higher density at the spark site.  相似文献   

3.
Little is known of the excitatory mechanisms that contribute to the tonic contraction of the corpus cavernosum smooth muscle in the flaccid state. We used patch-clamp electrophysiology to investigate a previously unidentified inward current in freshly isolated rat and human corporal myocytes. Phenylephrine (PE) contracted cells and activated whole cell currents. Outward current was identified as large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) current. The inward current elicited by PE was dependent on the Cl(-) gradient and was inhibited by niflumic acid, indicative of a Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) (Cl(Ca)) current. Furthermore, spontaneous transient outward and inward currents (STOCs and STICs, respectively) were identified in both rat and human corporal myocytes and derived from large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) and Cl(Ca) channel activity. STICs and STOCs were inhibited by PE and A-23187, and combined 8-bromoadenosine cAMP and 8-bromoadenosine cGMP decreased their frequency. When studied in vivo, chloride channel blockers transiently increased intracavernosal pressure and prolonged nerve-evoked erections. This report reveals for the first time Cl(Ca) current in rat and human corpus cavernosum smooth muscle cells and demonstrates its key functional role in the regulation of penile erection.  相似文献   

4.
Short-lived, localized Ca(2+) events mediate Ca(2+) signaling with high efficiency and great fidelity largely as a result of the close proximity between Ca(2+)-permeable ion channels and their molecular targets. However, in most cases, direct evidence of the spatial relationship between these two types of molecules is lacking, and, thus, mechanistic understanding of local Ca(2+) signaling is incomplete. In this study, we use an integrated approach to tackling this issue on a prototypical local Ca(2+) signaling system composed of Ca(2+) sparks resulting from the opening of ryanodine receptors (RYRs) and spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) caused by the opening of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (BK) channels in airway smooth muscle. Biophysical analyses of STOCs and Ca(2+) sparks acquired at 333 Hz demonstrate that these two events are associated closely in time, and approximately eight RYRs open to give rise to a Ca(2+) spark, which activates ~15 BK channels to generate a STOC at 0 mV. Dual immunocytochemistry and 3-D deconvolution at high spatial resolution reveal that both RYRs and BK channels form clusters and RYR1 and RYR2 (but not RYR3) localize near the membrane. Using the spatial relationship between RYRs and BK channels, the spatial-temporal profile of [Ca(2+)] resulting from Ca(2+) sparks, and the kinetic model of BK channels, we estimate that an average Ca(2+) spark caused by the opening of a cluster of RYR1 or RYR2 acts on BK channels from two to three clusters that are randomly distributed within an ~600-nm radius of RYRs. With this spatial organization of RYRs and BK channels, we are able to model BK channel currents with the same salient features as those observed in STOCs across a range of physiological membrane potentials. Thus, this study provides a mechanistic understanding of the activation of STOCs by Ca(2+) sparks using explicit knowledge of the spatial relationship between RYRs (the Ca(2+) source) and BK channels (the Ca(2+) target).  相似文献   

5.
L-type, voltage-dependent calcium (Ca(2+)) channels, ryanodine-sensitive Ca(2+) release (RyR) channels, and large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated potassium (K(Ca)) channels comprise a functional unit that regulates smooth muscle contractility. Here, we investigated whether genetic ablation of caveolin-1 (cav-1), a caveolae protein, alters Ca(2+) spark to K(Ca) channel coupling and Ca(2+) spark regulation by voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels in murine cerebral artery smooth muscle cells. Caveolae were abundant in the sarcolemma of control (cav-1(+/+)) cells but were not observed in cav-1-deficient (cav-1(-/-)) cells. Ca(2+) spark and transient K(Ca) current frequency were approximately twofold higher in cav-1(-/-) than in cav-1(+/+) cells. Although voltage-dependent Ca(2+) current density was similar in cav-1(+/+) and cav-1(-/-) cells, diltiazem and Cd(2+), voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channel blockers, reduced transient K(Ca) current frequency to approximately 55% of control in cav-1(+/+) cells but did not alter transient K(Ca) current frequency in cav-1(-/-) cells. Furthermore, although K(Ca) channel density was elevated in cav-1(-/-) cells, transient K(Ca) current amplitude was similar to that in cav-1(+/+) cells. Higher Ca(2+) spark frequency in cav-1(-/-) cells was not due to elevated intracellular Ca(2+) concentration, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) load, or nitric oxide synthase activity. Similarly, Ca(2+) spark amplitude and spread, the percentage of Ca(2+) sparks that activated a transient K(Ca) current, the amplitude relationship between sparks and transient K(Ca) currents, and K(Ca) channel conductance and apparent Ca(2+) sensitivity were similar in cav-1(+/+) and cav-1(-/-) cells. In summary, cav-1 ablation elevates Ca(2+) spark and transient K(Ca) current frequency, attenuates the coupling relationship between voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels and RyR channels that generate Ca(2+) sparks, and elevates K(Ca) channel density but does not alter transient K(Ca) current activation by Ca(2+) sparks. These findings indicate that cav-1 is required for physiological Ca(2+) spark and transient K(Ca) current regulation in cerebral artery smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+ sparks are short lived and localized Ca2+ transients resulting from the opening of ryanodine receptors in sarcoplasmic reticulum. These events relax certain types of smooth muscle by activating big conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels to produce spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) and the resultant closure of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. But in many smooth muscles from a variety of organs, Ca2+ sparks can additionally activate Ca2+-activated Cl channels to generate spontaneous transient inward current (STICs). To date, the physiological roles of Ca2+ sparks in this latter group of smooth muscle remain elusive. Here, we show that in airway smooth muscle, Ca2+ sparks under physiological conditions, activating STOCs and STICs, induce biphasic membrane potential transients (BiMPTs), leading to membrane potential oscillations. Paradoxically, BiMPTs stabilize the membrane potential by clamping it within a negative range and prevent the generation of action potentials. Moreover, blocking either Ca2+ sparks or hyperpolarization components of BiMPTs activates voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, resulting in an increase in global [Ca2+]i and cell contraction. Therefore, Ca2+ sparks in smooth muscle presenting both STICs and STOCs act as a stabilizer of membrane potential, and altering the balance can profoundly alter the status of excitability and contractility. These results reveal a novel mechanism underlying the control of excitability and contractility in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

7.
Large-conductance Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) (BK(Ca)) channels play a critical role in regulating urinary bladder smooth muscle (UBSM) excitability and contractility. Measurements of BK(Ca) currents and intracellular Ca(2+) revealed that BK(Ca) currents are activated by Ca(2+) release events (Ca(2+) sparks) from ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The goals of this project were to characterize Ca(2+) sparks and BK(Ca) currents and to determine the voltage dependence of the coupling of RyRs (Ca(2+) sparks) to BK(Ca) channels in UBSM. Ca(2+) sparks in UBSM had properties similar to those described in arterial smooth muscle. Most Ca(2+) sparks caused BK(Ca) currents at all voltages tested, consistent with the BK(Ca) channels sensing approximately 10 microM Ca(2+). Membrane potential depolarization from -50 to -20 mV increased Ca(2+) spark and BK(Ca) current frequency threefold. However, membrane depolarization over this range had a differential effect on spark and current amplitude, with Ca(2+) spark amplitude increasing by only 30% and BK(Ca) current amplitude increasing 16-fold. A major component of the amplitude modulation of spark-activated BK(Ca) current was quantitatively explained by the known voltage dependence of the Ca(2+) sensitivity of BK(Ca) channels. We, therefore, propose that membrane potential, or any other agent that modulates the Ca(2+) sensitivity of BK(Ca) channels, profoundly alters the coupling strength of Ca(2+) sparks to BK(Ca) channels.  相似文献   

8.
Recent studies have highlighted the role of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) in controlling excitability, Ca2+ signalling and contractility in smooth muscle. Caffeine, an agonist of ryanodine receptors (RyRs) on the SR has been previously shown to effect Ca2+ signalling but its effects on excitability and contractility are not so clear. We have studied the effects of low concentration of caffeine (1 mM) on Ca2+ signalling, action potential and contractility of guinea pig ureteric smooth muscle. Caffeine produced reversible inhibition of the action potentials, Ca2+ transients and phasic contractions evoked by electrical stimulation. It had no effect on the inward Ca2+ current or Ca2+ transient but increased the amplitude and the frequency of spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) in voltage clamped ureteric myocytes, suggesting Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BK) are affected by it. In isolated cells and cells in situ caffeine produced an increase in the frequency and the amplitude of Ca2+ sparks as well the number of spark discharging sites per cell. Inhibition of Ca2+ sparks by ryanodine (50 microM) or SR Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA) cyclopiazonic acid (CPA, 20 microM) or BKCa channels by iberiotoxin (200 nM) or TEA (1 mM), fully reversed the inhibitory effect of caffeine on Ca2+ transients and force evoked by electrical field stimulation (EFS). These data suggest that the inhibitory effect of caffeine on the action potential, Ca2+ transients and force in ureteric smooth muscle is caused by activation of Ca2+ sparks/STOCs coupling mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
The main purpose of this study was to characterize the stimulation of Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) (Cl(Ca)) by store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE) channels in rabbit pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) and determine if this process requires reverse-mode Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange (NCX). In whole-cell voltage clamped PASMCs incubated with 1 μmol/L nifedipine (Nif) to inhibit Ca(2+) channels, 30 μmol/L cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), a SERCA pump inhibitor, activated a nonselective cation conductance permeable to Na(+) (I(SOC)) during an initial 1-3 s step, ranging from-120 to +60 mV, and Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) current (I(Cl(Ca))) during a second step to +90 mV that increased with the level of the preceding hyperpolarizing step. Niflumic acid (100 μmol/L), a Cl(Ca) channel blocker, abolished I(Cl(Ca)) but had no effect on I(SOC), whereas the I(SOC) blocker SKF-96365 (50 μmol/L) suppressed both currents. Dual patch clamp and Fluo-4 fluorescence measurements revealed the appearance of CPA-induced Ca(2+) transients of increasing magnitude with increasing hyperpolarizing steps, which correlated with I(Cl(Ca)) amplitude. The absence of Ca(2+) transients at positive potentials following a hyperpolarizing step combined with the observation that SOCE-stimulated I(Cl(Ca)) was unaffected by the NCX blocker KB-R7943 (1 μmol/L) suggest that the SOCE/Cl(Ca) interaction does not require reverse-mode NCX in our conditions.  相似文献   

10.
A Ca(2+) spark arises when a cluster of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) channels (ryanodine receptors or RyRs) opens to release calcium in a locally regenerative manner. Normally triggered by Ca(2+) influx across the sarcolemmal or transverse tubule membrane neighboring the cluster, the Ca(2+) spark has been shown to be the elementary Ca(2+) signaling event of excitation-contraction coupling in heart muscle. However, the question of how the Ca(2+) spark terminates remains a central, unresolved issue. Here we present a new model, "sticky cluster," of SR Ca(2+) release that simulates Ca(2+) spark behavior and enables robust Ca(2+) spark termination. Two newly documented features of RyR behavior have been incorporated in this otherwise simple model: "coupled gating" and an opening rate that depends on SR lumenal [Ca(2+)]. Using a Monte Carlo method, local Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release from clusters containing between 10 and 100 RyRs is modeled. After release is triggered, Ca(2+) flux from RyRs diffuses into the cytosol and binds to intracellular buffers and the fluorescent Ca(2+) indicator fluo-3 to produce the model Ca(2+) spark. Ca(2+) sparks generated by the sticky cluster model resemble those observed experimentally, and Ca(2+) spark duration and amplitude are largely insensitive to the number of RyRs in a cluster. As expected from heart cell investigation, the spontaneous Ca(2+) spark rate in the model increases with elevated cytosolic or SR lumenal [Ca(2+)]. Furthermore, reduction of RyR coupling leads to prolonged model Ca(2+) sparks just as treatment with FK506 lengthens Ca(2+) sparks in heart cells. This new model of Ca(2+) spark behavior provides a "proof of principle" test of a new hypothesis for Ca(2+) spark termination and reproduces critical features of Ca(2+) sparks observed experimentally.  相似文献   

11.
We have compared the effects of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) release inhibitor, ruthenium red (RR), on single ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels in lipid bilayers, and on Ca(2+) sparks in permeabilized rat ventricular myocytes. Ruthenium red at 5 microM inhibited the open probability (P(o)) of RyRs approximately 20-50-fold, without significantly affecting the conductance or mean open time of the channel. At the same concentration, RR inhibited the frequency of Ca(2+) sparks in permeabilized myocytes by approximately 10-fold, and reduced the amplitude of large amplitude events (with most probable localization on the line scan) by approximately 3-fold. According to our theoretical simulations, performed with a numerical model of Ca(2+) spark formation, this reduction in Ca(2+) spark amplitude corresponds to an approximately 4-fold decrease in Ca(2+) release flux underlying Ca(2+) sparks. Ruthenium red (5 microM) increased the SR Ca(2+) content by approximately 2-fold (from 151 to 312 micromol/l cytosol). Considering the degree of inhibition of local Ca(2+) release events, the increase in SR Ca(2+) load by RR, and the lack of effects of RR on single RyR open time and conductance, we have estimated that Ca(2+) sparks under normal conditions are generated by openings of at least 10 single RyRs.  相似文献   

12.
Amplitude, spatial width, and rise time of Ca(2+) sparks were compared in frog fast-twitch muscle, in three conditions that alter activation of release channels by [Ca(2+)]. A total of approximately 17,000 sparks from 30 cells were evaluated. In cells under voltage clamp, caffeine (0.5 or 1 mM) increased average spark width by 28%, rise time by 18%, and amplitude by 7%. Increases in width were significant even among events of the same rise time. Spontaneous events recorded in permeabilized fibers with low internal [Mg(2+)] (0.4 mM), had width and rise times greater than in reference, and not significantly different than those in caffeine. The spark average in reference rides on a continuous fluorescence "ridge" and is continued by an "ember," a prolongation of width approximately 1 microm and amplitude <0.2, vanishing in approximately 100 ms. Ridge and ember were absent in caffeine and in permeabilized cells. Exposure of voltage-clamped cells to high internal [Mg(2+)] (7 mM) had effects opposite to caffeine, reducing spark width by 26% and amplitude by 27%. In high [Mg(2+)], the ember was visible in individual sparks as a prolongation of variable duration and amplitude up to 1.2. Based on simulations and calculation of Ca(2+) release flux from averaged sparks, the increase in spark width caused by caffeine was interpreted as evidence of an increase in radius of the release source-presumably by recruitment of additional channels. Conversely, spark narrowing suggests loss of contributing channels in high Mg(2+). Therefore, these changes in spark width at constant rise times are evidence of a multichannel origin of sparks. Because ridge and ember were reduced by promoters of Ca(2+)-dependent activation (caffeine, low [Mg(2+)]) and became more visible in the presence of its inhibitors, they are probably manifestations of Ca(2+) release directly operated by voltage sensors.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Local discrete elevations in myoplasmic Ca2+ (Ca2+ sparks) arise from the opening of a small group of RyRs. Summation of a large number of Ca2+ sparks gives rise to the whole cell Ca2+ transient necessary for muscle contraction, Unlike sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicle preparations and isolated single channels in artificial membranes, the study of Ca2+ sparks provides a means to understand the regulation of a small group of RyRs in the environment of a functionally intact triad and in the presence of endogenous regulatory proteins. To gain insight into the mechanisms that regulate the gating of RyRs we have utilized laser scanning confocal microscopy to measure Ca2+ sparks in permeabilized frog skeletal muscle fibers. This review summarizes our recent studies using both exogenous (ImperatoxinA and domain peptides) and endogenous (calmodulin) modulators of RyR to gain insight into the number of RyR Ca2+ release channels underlying a Ca2+ spark, how domain-domain interactions within RyR regulate the functional state of the channel as well as gating mechanisms of RyR in living muscle fibers.  相似文献   

15.
For a single or a group of Markov channels gating reversibly, distributions of open and closed times should be the sum of positively weighted decaying exponentials. Violation of this microscopic reversibility has been demonstrated previously on a number of occasions at the single channel level, and has been attributed to possible channel coupling to external sources of free energy. Here we show that distribution of durations of Ca(2+) release underlying Ca(2+) sparks in intact cardiac myocytes exhibits a prominent mode at approximately 8 ms. Analysis of the cycle time for repetitive sparks at hyperactive sites revealed no intervals briefer than approximately 35 ms and a mode at approximately 90 ms. These results indicate that, regardless of whether Ca(2+) sparks are single-channel or multi-channel in origin, they are generated by thermodynamically irreversible stochastic processes. In contrast, data from planar lipid bilayer experiments were consistent with reversible gating of RyR under asymmetric cis (4 microM) and trans Ca(2+) (10 mM), suggesting that the irreversibility for Ca(2+) spark genesis may reside at a supramolecular level. Modeling suggests that Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release among adjacent RyRs may couple the external energy derived from Ca(2+) gradients across the SR to RyR gating in situ, and drive the irreversible generation of Ca(2+) sparks.  相似文献   

16.
To signal cell responses, Ca(2+) is released from storage through intracellular Ca(2+) channels. Unlike most plasmalemmal channels, these are clustered in quasi-crystalline arrays, which should endow them with unique properties. Two distinct patterns of local activation of Ca(2+) release were revealed in images of Ca(2+) sparks in permeabilized cells of amphibian muscle. In the presence of sulfate, an anion that enters the SR and precipitates Ca(2+), sparks became wider than in the conventional, glutamate-based solution. Some of these were "protoplatykurtic" (had a flat top from early on), suggesting an extensive array of channels that activate simultaneously. Under these conditions the rate of production of signal mass was roughly constant during the rise time of the spark and could be as high as 5 microm(3) ms(-1), consistent with a release current >50 pA since the beginning of the event. This pattern, called "concerted activation," was observed also in rat muscle fibers. When sulfate was combined with a reduced cytosolic [Ca(2+)] (50 nM) these sparks coexisted (and interfered) with a sequential progression of channel opening, probably mediated by Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR). Sequential propagation, observed only in frogs, may require parajunctional channels, of RyR isoform beta, which are absent in the rat. Concerted opening instead appears to be a property of RyR alpha in the amphibian and the homologous isoform 1 in the mammal.  相似文献   

17.
Spontaneous Ca(2+)-sparks were imaged using confocal line scans of fluo-4 loaded myocytes in retinal arterioles. Tetracaine produced concentration-dependent decreases in spark frequency, and modified the spatiotemporal characteristics of residual sparks. Tetracaine (10 microM) reduced the rate of rise but prolonged the average rise time so that average spark amplitude was unaltered. The mean half-time of spark decay was also unaffected, suggesting that spark termination, although delayed, remained well synchronized. Sparks spread transversely across the myocytes in these vessels, and the speed of spread within individual sparks was slowed by approximately 60% in 10 microM tetracaine, as expected if the spark was propagated across the cell but the average P(o) for RyRs was reduced. Staining of isolated vessels with BODIPY-ryanodine and di-4-ANEPPS showed that RyRs were located both peripherally, adjacent to the plasma membrane, and in transverse extensions of the SR from one side of the cell to the other. Immuno-labelling of retinal flat mounts demonstrated the presence RyR(2) in arteriole smooth muscle but not RyR(1). We conclude that Ca(2+)-sparks in smooth muscle can result from sequential activation of RyRs distributed over an area of several microm(2), rather than from tightly clustered channels as in striated muscle.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Transiently local release of Ca(2+) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) activates nearby Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels to produce spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) in smooth muscle cells. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the possible effect of peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) on STOCs in mesenteric arteriolar smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) and decide whether Ca(2+) mobilization was involved in STOCs alteration by ONOO(-). STOCs were recorded and characterized using the perforated whole-cell patch-clamp configuration. The results demonstrated that STOCs activity was greatly suppressed by removal of extracellular Ca(2+); by addition of nifedipine, a specific inhibitor of L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (VGCCs); or by addition of ryanodine, a SR ryanodine receptors (RyRs) blocker. In contrast, both caffeine, a RyR activator, and 2-aminoethoxydiphenylborate (2-APB), a membrane-permeable inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors, (IP3R) antagonist, increased STOCs activity. 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1), an ONOO(-) donor, at concentrations of 20-200 microM, induced a dose-dependent enhancement of STOCs in ASMCs and led to conspicuous increases in STOCs frequency and amplitude, which were prevented by prior exposure to low external Ca(2+) (200 nM), ryanodine (10 microM), or nifedipine (10 microM). In contrast, caffeine (0.5 mM) did not further stimulate STOCs in ASMCs preincubated with SIN-1, and pretreatment with 2-APB (50 microM) had little effect on ONOO(-) -induced STOCs activation. These findings suggest that complex Ca(2+)-mobilizing pathways, including external Ca2+ influx through VGCCs activation and subsequent internal Ca(2+) release through RyRs but not IP3Rs, are involved in ONOO(-)mediated STOCs enhancement in ASMCs.  相似文献   

20.
Ca+ sparks originating from ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are known to cause membrane hyperpolarization and vasorelaxation in systemic arterial myocytes. By contrast, we have found that Ca2+ sparks of pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) are associated with membrane depolarization and activated by endothelin-1 (ET-1), a potent vasoconstrictor that mediates/modulates acute and chronic hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. In this study, we characterized the effects of ET-1 on the physical properties of Ca2+ sparks and probed the signal transduction mechanism for spark activation in rat intralobar PASMCs. Application of ET-1 at 0.1-10 nM caused concentration-dependent increases in frequency, duration, and amplitude of Ca2+ sparks. The ET-1-induced increase in spark frequency was inhibited by BQ-123, an ETA-receptor antagonist; by U-73122, a PLC inhibitor; and by xestospongin C and 2-aminoethyl diphenylborate, antagonists of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) receptors (IP3Rs). However, it was unrelated to sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ content, activation of L-type Ca2+ channels, PKC, or cADP ribose. Photorelease of caged-IP3 indicated that Ca2+ release from IP3R could cross-activate RyRs to generate Ca2+ sparks. Immunocytochemistry showed that the distributions of IP3Rs and RyRs were similar in PASMCs. Moreover, inhibition of Ca2+ sparks with ryanodine caused a significant rightward shift in the ET-1 concentration-tension relationship in pulmonary arteries. These results suggest that ET-1 activation of Ca2+ sparks is mediated via the ETA receptor-PLC-IP3 pathway and local Ca2+ cross-signaling between IP3Rs and RyRs; in addition, this novel signaling mechanism contributes significantly to the ET-1-induced vasoconstriction in pulmonary arteries.  相似文献   

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