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1.
F Foldes 《Life sciences》1981,28(14):1585-1590
Since 1932 invitro physiological and pharmacological studies on neuromuscular and other types of synaptic transmission have been carried out usually in Krebs' of similar balanced electrolyte solutions. It has been disregarded, however, that although the total calcium [Cat] (2.5 mM) and [Mgt] (1.2 mM), are about the same in human plasma and in Krebs' solution, the physiologically important [Ca2+] and [Mg2+], primarily because of binding to plasma proteins, are much lower in plasma (1.1 and 0.6 mM) than in Krebs' solution (2.0 and 1.1 mM). We observed that in a modified Krebs' solution in which the [Cat] and [Mgt] are 1.4 and 0.9 mM respectively and the [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] are about the same as in human plasma, the Ca2+ dependent volley output of acetylcholine is less and the inhibition of the electrically induced isometric twitch tension of the rat phrenic nerve - hemidiaphragm preparation by nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents and certain antibiotics is greater than in conventional Krebs' solution, in which the [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] are higher than invivo. Similarly, during electrical field stimulation of the guinea-pig myenteric plexus - longitudinal muscle preparation volley output of acetylcholine is lower and the inhibition of the isometric contraction of the muscle by normophine is greater in modified than in conventional Krebs' solution. It is suggested that for greater relevance to invivo conditions the [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] of balanced electrolyte solutions used in in vitro experiments on synaptic transmission should be the same as in human plasma or in the plasma of the species of the experimental animal.  相似文献   

2.

Fe(II) cations bind with high efficiency and specificity at the high-affinity (HA), Mn-binding site (termed the “blocking effect” since Fe blocks further electron donation to the site) of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in Mn-depleted, photosystem II (PSII) membrane fragments (Semin et al. in Biochemistry 41:5854, 2002). Furthermore, Fe(II) cations can substitute for 1 or 2Mn cations (pH dependent) in Ca-depleted PSII membranes (Semin et al. in Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes 48:227, 2016; Semin et al. in Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B 178:192, 2018). In the current study, we examined the effect of Ca2+ cations on the interaction of Fe(II) ions with Mn-depleted [PSII(-Mn)] and Ca-depleted [PSII(-Ca)] photosystem II membranes. We found that Ca2+ cations (about 50 mM) inhibit the light-dependent oxidation of Fe(II) (5 µM) by about 25% in PSII(-Mn) membranes, whereas inhibition of the blocking process is greater at about 40%. Blocking of the HA site by Fe cations also decreases the rate of charge recombination between QA? and YZ?+ from t1/2?=?30 ms to 46 ms. However, Ca2+ does not affect the rate during the blocking process. An Fe(II) cation (20 µM) replaces 1Mn cation in the Mn4CaO5 catalytic cluster of PSII(-Ca) membranes at pH 5.7 but 2 Mn cations at pH 6.5. In the presence of Ca2+ (10 mM) during the substitution process, Fe(II) is not able to extract Mn at pH 5.7 and extracts only 1Mn at pH 6.5 (instead of two without Ca2+). Measurements of fluorescence induction kinetics support these observations. Inhibition of Mn substitution with Fe(II) cations in the OEC only occurs with Ca2+ and Sr2+ cations, which are also able to restore oxygen evolution in PSII(-Ca) samples. Nonactive cations like La3+, Ni2+, Cd2+, and Mg2+ have no influence on the replacement of Mn with Fe. These results show that the location and/or ligand composition of one Mn cation in the Mn4CaO5 cluster is strongly affected by calcium depletion or rebinding and that bound calcium affects the redox potential of the extractable Mn4 cation in the OEC, making it resistant to reduction.

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3.
Studies with electron microscopy have shown that sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) andmitochondria locate close to each other in cardiac muscle cells. We investigated the hypothesis thatthis proximity results in a transient exposure of mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter (CaUP) to highconcentrations of Ca2+ following Ca2+ release from the SR and thus an influx of Ca2+into mitochondria. Single ventricular myocytes of rat were skinned by exposing them to aphysiological solution containing saponin (0.2 mg/ml). Cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c)and mitochondrial Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]m) were measured with fura-2 and rhod2,respectively. Application of caffeine (10 mM) induced a concomitant increase in[Ca2+]c and [Ca2+]m.Ruthenium red, at concentrations that block CaUP but not SR release, diminished thecaffeine-induced increase in [Ca2+]m but not[Ca2+]c. In the presence of 1 mM BAPTA, a Ca2+ chelator,the caffeine-induced increase in [Ca2+]m was reduced substantially less than [Ca2+]c. Moreover,inhibition of SR Ca2+ pump with two different concentrations of thapsigargin caused anincrease in [Ca2+]m, which was related to the rate of [Ca2+]c increase. Finally, electronmicroscopy showed that sites of junctions between SR and T tubules from which Ca2+ is released,or Ca2+ release units, CRUs, are preferentially located in close proximity to mitochondria.The distance between individual SR Ca2+ release channels (feet or ryanodine receptors) isvery short, ranging between approximately 37 and 270 nm. These results are consistent withthe idea that there is a preferential coupling of Ca2+ transport from SR to mitochondria incardiac muscle cells, because of their structural proximity.  相似文献   

4.
The dyadic organization of ventricular myocytes ensures synchronized activation of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release during systole. However, it remains obscure how the dyadic organization affects SR Ca2+ handling during diastole. By measuring intraluminal SR Ca2+ ([Ca2+]SR) decline during rest in rabbit ventricular myocytes, we found that ∼76% of leaked SR Ca2+ is extruded from the cytosol and only ∼24% is pumped back into the SR. Thus, the majority of Ca2+ that leaks from the SR is removed from the cytosol before it can be sequestered back into the SR by the SR Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA). Detubulation decreased [Ca2+]SR decline during rest, thus making the leaked SR Ca2+ more accessible for SERCA. These results suggest that Ca2+ extrusion systems are localized in T-tubules. Inhibition of Na+-Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) slowed [Ca2+]SR decline during rest by threefold, however did not prevent it. Depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential during NCX inhibition completely prevented the rest-dependent [Ca2+]SR decline. Despite a significant SR Ca2+ leak, Ca2+ sparks were very rare events in control conditions. NCX inhibition or detubulation increased Ca2+ spark activity independent of SR Ca2+ load. Overall, these results indicate that during rest NCX effectively competes with SERCA for cytosolic Ca2+ that leaks from the SR. This can be explained if the majority of SR Ca2+ leak occurs through ryanodine receptors in the junctional SR that are located closely to NCX in the dyadic cleft. Such control of the dyadic [Ca2+] by NCX play a critical role in suppressing Ca2+ sparks during rest.  相似文献   

5.
The dyadic organization of ventricular myocytes ensures synchronized activation of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release during systole. However, it remains obscure how the dyadic organization affects SR Ca2+ handling during diastole. By measuring intraluminal SR Ca2+ ([Ca2+]SR) decline during rest in rabbit ventricular myocytes, we found that ∼76% of leaked SR Ca2+ is extruded from the cytosol and only ∼24% is pumped back into the SR. Thus, the majority of Ca2+ that leaks from the SR is removed from the cytosol before it can be sequestered back into the SR by the SR Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA). Detubulation decreased [Ca2+]SR decline during rest, thus making the leaked SR Ca2+ more accessible for SERCA. These results suggest that Ca2+ extrusion systems are localized in T-tubules. Inhibition of Na+-Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) slowed [Ca2+]SR decline during rest by threefold, however did not prevent it. Depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential during NCX inhibition completely prevented the rest-dependent [Ca2+]SR decline. Despite a significant SR Ca2+ leak, Ca2+ sparks were very rare events in control conditions. NCX inhibition or detubulation increased Ca2+ spark activity independent of SR Ca2+ load. Overall, these results indicate that during rest NCX effectively competes with SERCA for cytosolic Ca2+ that leaks from the SR. This can be explained if the majority of SR Ca2+ leak occurs through ryanodine receptors in the junctional SR that are located closely to NCX in the dyadic cleft. Such control of the dyadic [Ca2+] by NCX play a critical role in suppressing Ca2+ sparks during rest.  相似文献   

6.
The spatio-temporal properties of Ca2+ transients during excitation-contraction coupling and elementary Ca2+ release events (Ca2+ sparks) were studied in atrial and ventricular myocytes with ultra-fast confocal microscopy using a Zeiss LSM 5 LIVE system that allows sampling rates of up to 60 kHz. Ca2+ sparks which originated from subsarcolemmal junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (j-SR) release sites in atrial myocytes were anisotropic and elongated in the longitudinal direction of the cell. Ca2+ sparks in atrial cells originating from non-junctional SR and in ventricular myocytes were symmetrical. Ca2+ spark recording in line scan mode at 40,000 lines/s uncovered step-like increases of [Ca2+]i. 2-D imaging of Ca2+ transients revealed an asynchronous activation of release sites and allowed the sequential recording of Ca2+ entry through surface membrane Ca2+ channels and subsequent activation of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release. With a latency of 2.5 ms after application of an electrical stimulus, Ca2+ entry could be detected that was followed by SR Ca2+ release after an additional 3 ms delay. Maximum Ca2+ release was observed 4 ms after the beginning of release. The timing of Ca2+ entry and release was confirmed by simultaneous [Ca2+]i and membrane current measurements using the whole cell voltage-clamp technique. In atrial cells activation of discrete individual release sites of the j-SR led to spatially restricted Ca2+ release events that fused into a peripheral ring of elevated [Ca2+]i that subsequently propagated in a wave-like fashion towards the center of the cell. In ventricular myocytes asynchronous Ca2+ release signals from discrete sites with no preferential subcellular location preceded the whole-cell Ca2+ transient. In summary, ultra-fast confocal imaging allows investigation of Ca2+ signals with a time resolution similar to patch clamp technique, however in a less invasive fashion.  相似文献   

7.
We measured intracellular Mg2+ concentration ([Mg2+]i) in rat ventricular myocytes using the fluorescent indicator furaptra (25°C). In normally energized cells loaded with Mg2+, the introduction of extracellular Na+ induced a rapid decrease in [Mg2+]i: the initial rate of decrease in [Mg2+]i (initial Δ[Mg2+]it) is thought to represent the rate of Na+-dependent Mg2+ efflux (putative Na+/Mg2+ exchange). To determine whether Mg2+ efflux depends directly on energy derived from cellular metabolism, in addition to the transmembrane Na+ gradient, we estimated the initial Δ[Mg2+]it after metabolic inhibition. In the absence of extracellular Na+ and Ca2+, treatment of the cells with 1 μM carbonyl cyanide p-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone, an uncoupler of mitochondria, caused a large increase in [Mg2+]i from ∼0.9 mM to ∼2.5 mM in a period of 5-8 min (probably because of breakdown of MgATP and release of Mg2+) and cell shortening to ∼50% of the initial length (probably because of formation of rigor cross-bridges). Similar increases in [Mg2+]i and cell shortening were observed after application of 5 mM potassium cyanide (KCN) (an inhibitor of respiration) for ≥90 min. The initial Δ[Mg2+]it was diminished, on average, by 90% in carbonyl cyanide p-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone-treated cells and 92% in KCN-treated cells. When the cells were treated with 5 mM KCN for shorter times (59-85 min), a significant decrease in the initial Δ[Mg2+]it (on average by 59%) was observed with only a slight shortening of the cell length. Intracellular Na+ concentration ([Na+]i) estimated with a Na+ indicator sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate was, on average, 5.0-10.5 mM during the time required for the initial Δ[Mg2+]it measurements, which is well below the [Na+]i level for half inhibition of the Mg2+ efflux (∼40 mM). Normalization of intracellular pH using 10 μM nigericin, a H+ ionophore, did not reverse the inhibition of the Mg2+ efflux. From these results, it seems likely that a decrease in ATP below the threshold of rigor cross-bridge formation (∼0.4 mM estimated indirectly in the this study), rather than elevation of [Na+]i or intracellular acidosis, inhibits the Mg2+ efflux, suggesting the absolute necessity of ATP for the Na+/Mg2+ exchange.  相似文献   

8.
Rat melanotrophs express several types of voltage-gated and ligand-gated calcium channels, although mechanisms involved in the maintenance of the resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) remain unknown. We analyzed mechanisms regulating resting [Ca2+]i in dissociated rat melanotrophs by Ca2+-imaging and patch-clamp techniques. Treatment with antagonists of L-type, but not N- or P/Q-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) as well as removal of extracellular Ca2+ resulted in a rapid and reversible decrease in [Ca2+]i, indicating constitutive Ca2+ influx through L-type VGCCs. Reduction of extracellular Na+ concentration (replacement with NMDG+) similarly decreased resting [Ca2+]i. When cells were champed at –80 mV, decrease in the extracellular Na+ resulted in a positive shift of the holding current. In cell-attached voltage-clamp and whole-cell current-clamp configurations, the reduction of extracellular Na+ caused hyperpolarisation. The holding current shifted in negative direction when extracellular K+ concentration was increased from 5 mM to 50 mM in the presence of K+ channel blockers, Ba2+ and TEA, indicating cation nature of persistent conductance. RT-PCR analyses of pars intermedia tissues detected mRNAs of TRPV1, TRPV4, TRPC6, and TRPM3-5. The TRPV channel blocker, ruthenium red, shifted the holding current in positive direction, and significantly decreased the resting [Ca2+]i. These results indicate operation of a constitutive cation conductance sensitive to ruthenium red, which regulates resting membrane potential and [Ca2+]i in rat melanotrophs.  相似文献   

9.
Internodal cells ofNitella axilliformis had a membrane potential of about−120mV and showed active cytoplasmic streaming with a rate of about 90 μm/sec in artificial pond water (APW) at 25C. When APW was replaced with 50 mM KCl solution, the membrane potential depolarized accompanying an action potential, and the cytoplasmic streaming stopped. Soon after this quick cessation, the streaming started again, but its velocity remained very low for at least 60 min. Removal of KCl from the external medium led to repolarization of the membrane and accelerated recovery of the streaming. The change in the concentration of free Ca2+ in the cytoplasm ([Ca2+]c) was monitored by light emission from aequorin which had previously been injected into the cytoplasm. Upon application of KCl to the external medium, the light emission, i.e., [Ca2+]c, quickly increased. It then decreased exponentially and reached the original low level within 100 sec. The cause of the long-lasting inhibition of cytoplasmic streaming observed even when [Ca2+]c had returned to its low resting level is discussed based on the mechanism proposed for action potential-induced cessation of cytoplasmic streaming; inactivation of myosin by Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation or formation of cross bridge between actin filaments and myosin.  相似文献   

10.
Experiments were performed to characterize the properties of the intrinsic Ca2+ buffers in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of cut fibers from frog twitch muscle. The concentrations of total and free calcium ions within the SR ([CaT]SR and [Ca2+]SR) were measured, respectively, with the EGTA/phenol red method and tetramethylmurexide (a low affinity Ca2+ indicator). Results indicate SR Ca2+ buffering was consistent with a single cooperative-binding component or a combination of a cooperative-binding component and a linear binding component accounting for 20% or less of the bound Ca2+. Under the assumption of a single cooperative-binding component, the most likely resting values of [Ca2+]SR and [CaT]SR are 0.67 and 17.1 mM, respectively, and the dissociation constant, Hill coefficient, and concentration of the Ca-binding sites are 0.78 mM, 3.0, and 44 mM, respectively. This information can be used to calculate a variable proportional to the Ca2+ permeability of the SR, namely d[CaT]SR/dt ÷ [Ca2+]SR (denoted release permeability), in experiments in which only [CaT]SR or [Ca2+]SR is measured. In response to a voltage-clamp step to −20 mV at 15°C, the release permeability reaches an early peak followed by a rapid decline to a quasi-steady level that lasts ∼50 ms, followed by a slower decline during which the release permeability decreases by at least threefold. During the quasi-steady level of release, the release amplitude is 3.3-fold greater than expected from voltage activation alone, a result consistent with the recruitment by Ca-induced Ca2+ release of 2.3 SR Ca2+ release channels neighboring each channel activated by its associated voltage sensor. Release permeability at −60 mV increases as [CaT]SR decreases from its resting physiological level to ∼0.1 of this level. This result argues against a release termination mechanism proposed in mammalian muscle fibers in which a luminal sensor of [Ca2+]SR inhibits release when [CaT]SR declines to a low level.  相似文献   

11.
Ba2+ block of large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels was studied in patches of membrane excised from cultures of rat skeletal muscle using the patch clamp technique. Under conditions in which a blocking Ba2+ ion would dissociate to the external solution (150 mM N-methyl-d-glucamine+ o, 500 mM K+ i, 10 μM Ba2+ i, +30 mV, and 100 μM Ca2+ i to fully activate the channel), Ba2+ blocks with a mean duration of ∼2 s occurred, on average, once every ∼100 ms of channel open time. Of these Ba2+ blocks, 78% terminated with a single step in the current to the fully open level and 22% terminated with a transition to a subconductance level at ∼0.26 of the fully open level (preopening) before stepping to the fully open level. Only one apparent preclosing was observed in ∼10,000 Ba2+ blocks. Thus, the preopenings represent Ba2+-induced time-irreversible subconductance gating. The fraction of Ba2+ blocks terminating with a preopening and the duration of preopenings (exponentially distributed, mean = 0.75 ms) appeared independent of changes in [Ba2+]i or membrane potential. The fractional conductance of the preopenings increased from 0.24 at +10 mV to 0.39 at +90 mV. In contrast, the average subconductance level during normal gating in the absence of Ba2+ was independent of membrane potential, suggesting different mechanisms for preopenings and normal subconductance levels. Preopenings were also observed with 10 mM Ba2+ o and no added Ba2+ i. Adding K+, Rb+, or Na+ to the external solution decreased the fraction of Ba2+ blocks with preopenings, with K+ and Rb+ being more effective than Na+. These results are consistent with models in which the blocking Ba2+ ion either induces a preopening gate, and then dissociates to the external solution, or moves to a site located on the external side of the Ba2+ blocking site and acts directly as the preopening gate.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A method was developed for the study of divalent cation transport events on the time scale of 20 msec or longer. Passive Ca2+ equilibration across the membranes of the Ca2+-ATPase rich fraction of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) was studied. The method makes use of the divalent cation sensitivity of the surface binding of the fluorescent probe 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS). Binding to the inside and outside surfaces is distinguished in fluorescent stopped-flow experiments. The surface binding reactions of the probe are faster than the time resolution of the instrument (ca. 3 msec), while binding reactions requiring transport across the membrane could be resolved. In Ca2+ influx experiments, the time course of fluorescent enhancement was monitored following a Ca2+ jump. The kinetics of Ca2+ efflux were studied by pre-equilibrating Ca2+ across the membrane, removing the external Ca2+ with an EGTA jump, and observing the time course of the fluorescence decrease. Rapid transport of ANS (coupled to K+) was ensured by the addition of valinomycin. Two processes of Ca2+ influx were observed: (i) a rapid process with small fluorescent amplitudes and at 1/2 of 40–60 msec and (ii) a slow process with a large amplitude and at 1/2 of 70–100 sec. The rates and extents of the two phases were quantitated in terms of the rates and extents of change in the Ca2+ concentration in the SR lumen. The slow phase accounted for a larger change, in the internal free Ca2+ concentration than did the first phase. For the influx of 10 mM Ca2+, the rapid phase raises the internal Ca2+ concentration to ca. 1 mM within its apparentt 1/2 of 20 msec. The slow phase brings about an increase of the internal Ca2+ concentration to 4 mM within its apparentt 1/2 of 90 sec. The two phases have average rates of increase of internal free Ca2+ concentration, [Ca] i /sec of ca. 50 mM/sec and ca. 0.02 mM/sec, respectively. The Ca2+ influx rates increased with increasing KCl concentration and with increasing external Ca2+ concentration.Two phases of Ca2+ efflux were observed. The amplitudes and rates were analyzed and the fast phase was shown to account for more Ca2+ movement than the slow phase. The rate of the fast phase was greatly increased by increasing the K+ concentration. The rate of the slow phase efflux decreased with increasing Ca2+ concentration in the external medium. The concentration for half-maximal inhibition was 4 M, a value close to the dissociation constant of the high affinity site on the Ca2+-ATPase.The above constitutes a body of circumstantial evidence that the passive Ca2+ permeability observed is mediated by the Ca2+-ATPase, acting as a Ca2+ for 2 K+ exchanger. The fast phases are explained as a partial turnover of the pump in the steady state. The slow rate is explained by a preference of the ion binding translocator site of the carrier for an outward orientation.The ANS technique was applied to the monovalent cation permeability of the Ca2+-ATPase rich SR and the results of other studies were corroborated and extended. The interaction of valinomycin with intrinsic permeability mechanisms of the SR was considered.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The outward potassium current of rat cerebellar granule cells in culture was studied with the whole-cell patch-clamp method. Two voltage-dependent components were identified: a slow current, resembling the classical delayed rectifier current, and a fast component, similar to anI A-type current. The slow current was insensitive to 4-aminopyridine and independent of external Ca2+, but significantly inhibited by 3mM tetraethylammonium. The fast current was depressed by external 4-aminopyridine, with an ED50=0.7mM, and it was abolished by removal of divalent cations from the external medium. The sensitivity of the transient outward current to different divalent cations was investigated by equimolar substitution of Ca2+, Mn2+ and Mg2+. In 2.8mM Mn2+, the transient potassium conductance was comparable to that in 2.8mM Ca2+, while in 2.8mM Mg2+ the transient component was drastically reduced, as in the absence of any divalent cations. However, when Ca2+ was present, Mg2+ up to 5mM had no effect. The transient current increased with increasing concentrations of external Ca2+, [Ca2+] o , and the maximum conductancevs. [Ca2+] o curve could be approximated by a one-site model. In addition, the current recorded with 5.5mM BAPTA in the intracellular solution was not different from that recorded in the absence of any Ca2+ buffer. These results suggest that divalent cations modulate the potassium channel interacting with a site on the external side of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

14.
External bioenergy (EBE, energy emitted from a human body) has been shown to increase intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i, an important factor in signal transduction) and regulate the cellular response to heat stress in cultured human lymphoid Jurkat T cells. In this study, we wanted to elucidate the underlying mechanisms. A bioenergy specialist emitted bioenergy sequentially toward tubes of cultured Jurkat T cells for one 15-minute period in buffers containing different ion compositions or different concentrations of inhibitors. [Ca2+]i was measured spectrofluorometrically using the fluorescent probe fura-2. The resting [Ca2+]i in Jurkat T cells was 70 ± 3 nM (n = 130) in the normal buffer. Removal of external calcium decreased the resting [Ca2+]i to 52 ± 2 nM (n = 23), indicating that [Ca2+] entry from the external source is important for maintaining the basal level of [Ca2+]i. Treatment of Jurkat T cells with EBE for 15 min increased [Ca2+]i by 30 ± 5% (P 0.05, Student t-test). The distance between the bioenergy specialist and Jurkat T cells and repetitive treatments of EBE did not attenuate [Ca2+]i responsiveness to EBE. Removal of external Ca2+ or Na+, but not Mg2+, inhibited the EBE-induced increase in [Ca2+]i. Dichlorobenzamil, an inhibitor of Na+/Ca2+ exchangers, also inhibited the EBE-induced increase in [Ca2+]i in a concentration-dependent manner with an IC50 of 0.11 ± 0.02 nM. When external [K+] was increased from 4.5 mM to 25 mM, EBE decreased [Ca2+]i. The EBE-induced increase was also blocked by verapamil, an L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channel blocker. These results suggest that the EBE-induced [Ca2+]i increase may serve as an objective means for assessing and validating bioenergy effects and those specialists claiming bioenergy capability. The increase in [Ca2+]i is mediated by activation of Na+/Ca2+ exchangers and opening of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. (Mol Cell Biochem 271: 51–59, 2005)  相似文献   

15.
Spatio-temporal dynamics of intracellular calcium, [Ca2+]i, regulate the contractile function of cardiac muscle cells. Measuring [Ca2+]i flux is central to the study of mechanisms that underlie both normal cardiac function and calcium-dependent etiologies in heart disease. However, current imaging techniques are limited in the spatial resolution to which changes in [Ca2+]i can be detected. Using spatial point process statistics techniques we developed a novel method to simulate the spatial distribution of RyR clusters, which act as the major mediators of contractile Ca2+ release, upon a physiologically-realistic cellular landscape composed of tightly-packed mitochondria and myofibrils. We applied this method to computationally combine confocal-scale (~ 200 nm) data of RyR clusters with 3D electron microscopy data (~ 30 nm) of myofibrils and mitochondria, both collected from adult rat left ventricular myocytes. Using this hybrid-scale spatial model, we simulated reaction-diffusion of [Ca2+]i during the rising phase of the transient (first 30 ms after initiation). At 30 ms, the average peak of the simulated [Ca2+]i transient and of the simulated fluorescence intensity signal, F/F0, reached values similar to that found in the literature ([Ca2+]i ≈1 μM; F/F0≈5.5). However, our model predicted the variation in [Ca2+]i to be between 0.3 and 12.7 μM (~3 to 100 fold from resting value of 0.1 μM) and the corresponding F/F0 signal ranging from 3 to 9.5. We demonstrate in this study that: (i) heterogeneities in the [Ca2+]i transient are due not only to heterogeneous distribution and clustering of mitochondria; (ii) but also to heterogeneous local densities of RyR clusters. Further, we show that: (iii) these structure-induced heterogeneities in [Ca2+]i can appear in line scan data. Finally, using our unique method for generating RyR cluster distributions, we demonstrate the robustness in the [Ca2+]i transient to differences in RyR cluster distributions measured between rat and human cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Binding of ouabain to Na+/K+-ATPase activated multiple signal transduction pathways including stimulation of Src, Ras, p42/44 MAPKs and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in rat cardiac myocytes. Inhibition of either Src or Ras ablated ouabain-induced increase in both [Ca2+]i and contractility. While PD98059 abolished the effects of ouabain on [Ca2+]i, it only caused a partial inhibition of ouabain-induced increases in contractility. On the other hand, pre-incubation of myocytes with N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) reduced the effects of ouabain on contractility, but not [Ca2+]i. Furthermore, 5-hydroxydecanoate (5-HD) blocked ouabain-induced ROS production and partially inhibited ouabain-induced increases in contractility in cardiac myocytes. Pre-incubation of myocytes with both 5-HD and PD98059 completely blocked ouabain's effect on contractility. Finally, we found that opening of mitochondrial KATP channel by diazoxide increased intracellular ROS and significantly raised contractility in cardiac myocytes. These new findings indicate that ouabain regulates cardiac contractility via both [Ca2+]i and ROS. While activation of MAPKs leads to increases in [Ca2+]i, opening of mitochondrial KATP channel relays the ouabain signal to increased ROS production in cardiac myocytes.  相似文献   

17.
We studied the peculiarities of permeability with respect to the main extracellular cations, Na+ and Ca2+, of cloned low-threshold calcium channels (LTCCs) of three subtypes, Cav3.1 (α1G), Cav3.2 (α 1H), and Cav3.3 (α1I), functionally expressed in Xenopus oocytes. In a calcium-free solution containing 100 mM Na+ and 5 mM calcium-chelating EGTA buffer (to eliminate residual concentrations of Ca2+) we observed considerable integral currents possessing the kinetics of inactivation typical of LTCCs and characterized by reversion potentials of −10 ± 1, −12 ± 1, and −18 ± 2 mV, respectively, for Cav3.1, Cav3.2, and Cav3.3 channels. The presence of Ca2+ in the extracellular solution exerted an ambiguous effect on the examined currents. On the one hand, Ca2+ effectively blocked the current of monovalent cations through cloned LTCCs (K d = 2, 10, and 18 μM for currents through channels Cav3.1, Cav3.2, and Cav3.3, respectively). On the other hand, at the concentration of 1 to 100 mM, Ca2+ itself functioned as a carrier of the inward current. Despite the fact that the calcium current reached the level of saturation in the presence of 5 mM Ca2+ in the external solution, extracellular Na+ influenced the permeability of these channels even in the presence of 10 mM Ca2+. The Cav3.3 channels were more permeable with respect to Na+ (P Ca/P Na ∼ 21) than Cav3.1 and Cav3.2 (P Ca/P Na ∼ 66). As a whole, our data indicate that cloned LTCCs form multi-ion Ca2+-selective pores, as these ions possess a high affinity for certain binding sites. Monovalent cations present together with Ca2+ in the external solution modulate the calcium permeability of these channels. Among the above-mentioned subtypes, Cav3.3 channels show the minimum selectivity with respect to Ca2+ and are most permeable for monovalent cations. Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 183–192, May–June, 2006.  相似文献   

18.
The electromagnetic field (EMF) is newly considered as an exogenous environmental stimulus that is closely related to ion transportation on the cellular membrane, maintaining the internal ionic homeostasis. Cation transports of Ca2+ and other metal ions, Cd2+, Zn2+, and Mn2+were studied in terms of the external Ca2+ stress, [Ca2+]ext, and exposure to the physical EMF. A specific yeast strain K667 was used for controlling CAX5 (cation/H+ exchanger) expression. Culture samples were exposed to 60 Hz, 0.1 mT sinusoidal or square magnetics waves, and intracellular cations of each sample were measured and analyzed. AtCAX5 transformant yeast grew normally under the metallic stress. However, the growth of the control group was significantly inhibited under the same cation concentration; 60 Hz and 0.1 mT magnetic field enhanced intracellular cation concentrations significantly as exposure time increased both in the AtCAX5 transformed yeast and in the control group. However, the AtCAX5-transformed yeast showed higher concentration of the intracellular cations than the control group under the same exposure EMF. AtCAX5-transformed yeasts displayed an increment in [Ca2+]int, [K+]int, [Na+]int, and [Zn2+]int concentration under the presence of both sinusoidal and square-waved EMF stresses compared to the control group, which shows that AtCAX5 expressed in the vacuole play an important role in maintaining the homeostasis of intracellular cations. These findings could be utilized in the cultivation of the crops which were resistant to excessive exogenous ions or in the production of biomass containing a large proportion of ions for nutritional food or in the bioremediation process in metal-polluted environments.  相似文献   

19.
The mating call of the Atlantic toadfish is generated by bursts of high-frequency twitches of the superfast twitch fibers that surround the swimbladder. At 16°C, a calling period can last several hours, with individual 80–100-Hz calls lasting ∼500 ms interleaved with silent periods (intercall intervals) lasting ∼10 s. To understand the intracellular movements of Ca2+ during the intercall intervals, superfast fibers were microinjected with fluo-4, a high-affinity fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, and stimulated by trains of 40 action potentials at 83 Hz, which mimics fiber activity during calling. The fluo-4 fluorescence signal was measured during and after the stimulus trains; the signal was also simulated with a kinetic model of the underlying myoplasmic Ca2+ movements, including the binding and transport of Ca2+ by the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ pumps. The estimated total amount of Ca2+ released from the SR during a first stimulus train is ∼6.5 mM (concentration referred to the myoplasmic water volume). At 40 ms after cessation of stimulation, the myoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) is below the threshold for force generation (∼3 µM), yet the estimated concentration of released Ca2+ remaining in the myoplasm (Δ[CaM]) is large, ∼5 mM, with ∼80% bound to parvalbumin. At 10 s after stimulation, [Ca2+] is ∼90 nM (three times the assumed resting level) and Δ[CaM] is ∼1.3 mM, with 97% bound to parvalbumin. Ca2+ movements during the intercall interval thus appear to be strongly influenced by (a) the accumulation of Ca2+ on parvalbumin and (b) the slow rate of Ca2+ pumping that ensues when parvalbumin lowers [Ca2+] near the resting level. With repetitive stimulus trains initiated at 10-s intervals, Ca2+ release and pumping come quickly into balance as a result of the stability (negative feedback) supplied by the increased rate of Ca2+ pumping at higher [Ca2+].  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the modulation by intracellular Ca2+of the epithelial Ca2+channel, ECaC, heterologously expressed in HEK 293 cells. Whole-cell and inside-out patch clamp current recordings were combined with FuraII-Ca2+measurements:1. Currents through ECaC were dramatically inhibited if Ca2+was the charge carrier. This inhibition was dependent on the extracellular Ca2+concentration and occurred also in cells buffered intracellularly with 10 mM BAPTA.2. Application of 30 mM [Ca2]einduced in non-Ca2] buffered HEK 293 cells at −80 m V an increase in intracellular Ca2+([Ca2]i) with a maximum rate of rise of 241 ±15nM/s (n= 18 cells) and a peak value of 891 ± 106 nM. The peak of the concomitant current with a density of 12.3 ± 2.6 pA/pF was closely correlated with the peak of the first-time derivative of the Ca2+transient, as expected if the Ca2+transient is due to influx of Ca2+. Consequently, no Ca2+] signal was observed in cells transfected with the Ca2+impermeable ECaC mutant, D542A, in which an aspartate in the pore region was neutralized.3. Increasing [Ca2+]iby dialyzing the cell with pipette solutions containing various Ca2+] concentrations, all buffered with 10 mM BAPTA, inhibited currents through ECaC carried by either Na+or Ca2+] ions. Half maximal inhibition of Ca2+currents in the absence of monovalent cations occurred at 67 nM (n between 6 and 8), whereas Na+currents in the absence of Ca2+] and Mg2+were inhibited with an IC50of 89 nM (n between 6 and 10). Currents through ECaC in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+and Na+, which are mainly carried by Ca2+, are inhibited by [Ca2]iwith an IC50of 82 nM (n between 6 and 8). Monovalent cation currents through the Ca2+impermeable D542A ECaC mutant were also inhibited by an elevation of [Ca2]i(IC50= 123 nM, n between 7 and 18).4. The sensitivity of ECaC currents in inside-out patches for [Ca2]iwas slightly shifted to higher concentrations as compared with whole cell measurements. Half-maximal inhibition occurred at 169 nM if Na+was the charge carrier (n between 4 and 11) and 228 nM at 1 mM [Ca2]e(n between 4 and 8).5. Recovery from inhibition upon washout of extracellular Ca2+(whole-cell configuration) or removal of Ca2+from the inner side of the channel (inside-out patches) was slow in both conditions. Half-maximal recovery was reached after 96 ± 34 s (n= 15) in whole-cell mode and after 135 ± 23 s (n= 17) in inside-out patches.6. We conclude that influx of Ca2+through ECaC and [Ca2]iinduce feedback inhibition of ECaC currents, which is controlled by the concentration of Ca2+in a micro domain near the inner mouth of the channel. Slow recovery seems to depend on dissociation of Ca2+from an internal Ca2+binding site at ECaC.  相似文献   

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