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1.
The activity of the cardiac Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1.1) undergoes continuous modulation during the contraction-relaxation cycle because of the accompanying changes in the electrochemical gradients for Na(+) and Ca(2+). In addition, NCX1.1 activity is also modulated via secondary, ionic regulatory mechanisms mediated by Na(+) and Ca(2+). In an effort to evaluate how ionic regulation influences exchange activity under pulsatile conditions, we studied the behavior of the cloned NCX1.1 during frequency-controlled changes in intracellular Na(+) and Ca(+) (Na(i)(+) and Ca(i)(2+)). Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange activity was measured by the giant excised patch-clamp technique with conditions chosen to maximize the extent of Na(+)- and Ca(2+)-dependent ionic regulation so that the effects of variables such as pulse frequency and duration could be optimally discerned. We demonstrate that increasing the frequency or duration of solution pulses leads to a progressive decline in pure outward, but not pure inward, Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange current. However, when the exchanger is permitted to alternate between inward and outward transport modes, both current modes exhibit substantial levels of inactivation. Changes in regulatory Ca(2+), or exposure of patches to limited proteolysis by alpha-chymotrypsin, reveal that this "coupling" is due to Na(+)-dependent inactivation originating from the outward current mode. Under physiological ionic conditions, however, evidence for modulation of exchange currents by Na(i)(+)-dependent inactivation was not apparent. The current approach provides a novel means for assessment of Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange ionic regulation that may ultimately prove useful in understanding its role under physiological and pathophysiological conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The Na+/Ca2+ exchanger plays a prominent role in regulating intracellular Ca2+ levels in cardiac myocytes and can serve as both a Ca2+ influx and efflux pathway. A novel inhibitor, KB-R7943, has been reported to selectively inhibit the reverse mode (i.e., Ca2+ entry) of Na+/Ca2+ exchange transport, although many aspects of its inhibitory properties remain controversial. We evaluated the inhibitory effects of KB-R7943 on Na+/Ca2+ exchange currents using the giant excised patch-clamp technique. Membrane patches were obtained from Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing the cloned cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchanger NCX1.1, and outward, inward, and combined inward-outward currents were studied. KB-R7943 preferentially inhibited outward (i.e., reverse) Na+/Ca2+ exchange currents. The inhibitory mechanism consists of direct effects on the transport machinery of the exchanger, with additional influences on ionic regulatory properties. Competitive interactions between KB-R7943 and the transported ions were not observed. The antiarrhythmic effects of KB-R7943 were then evaluated in an ischemia-reperfusion model of cardiac injury in Langendorff-perfused whole rabbit hearts using electrocardiography and measurements of left ventricular pressure. When 3 microM KB-R7943 was applied for 10 min before a 30-min global ischemic period, ventricular arrhythmias (tachycardia and fibrillation) associated with both ischemia and reperfusion were almost completely suppressed. The observed electrophysiological profile of KB-R7943 and its protective effects on ischemia-reperfusion-induced ventricular arrhythmias support the notion of a prominent role of Ca2+ entry via reverse Na+/Ca2+ exchange in this process.  相似文献   

3.
The properties of Na-Ca-K exchange current through the plasma membrane of intact rod outer segments (ROS) isolated from bovine retinas were studied with the optical probe neutral red. Small cellular organelles such as bovine ROS do not offer an adequate collecting area to measure Na-Ca-K exchange currents with electrophysiological techniques. This study demonstrates that Na-Ca-K exchange current in bovine ROS can be measured with the dye neutral red and dual-wavelength spectrophotometry. The binding of neutral red is sensitive to transport of cations across the plasma membrane of ROS by the effect of the translocated cations on the surface potential of the intracellular disk membranes (1985. J. Membr. Biol. 88: 249-262). Electrogenic Na+ fluxes through the ROS plasma membrane were measured with a resolution of 10(5) Na+ ions/ROS per s, equivalent to a current of approximately 0.01 pA; maximal electrogenic Na-Ca-K exchange flux in bovine ROS was equivalent to a maximal exchange current of 1-2 pA. Electrogenic Na+ fluxes were identified as Na-Ca-K exchange current based on a comparison between electrogenic Na+ flux and Na(+)-stimulated Ca2+ release with respect to flux rate, Na+ dependence, and ion selectivity. Neutral red monitored the net entry of a single positive charge carried by Na+ for each Ca2+ ion released (i.e., monitored the Na-Ca-K exchange current). Na-Ca-K exchange in the plasma membrane of bovine ROS had the following properties: (a) Inward Na-Ca-K exchange current required internal Ca2+ (half-maximal stimulation at a free Ca2+ concentration of 0.9 microM), whereas outward Na-Ca-K exchange current required both external Ca2+ (half-maximal stimulation at a free Ca2+ concentration of 1.1 microM) and external K+. (b) Inward Na-Ca-K exchange current depended in a sigmoidal manner on the external Na+ concentration, identical to Na(+)-stimulated Ca2+ release measured with Ca(2+)-indicating dyes. (c) The neutral red method was modified to measure Ca(2+)-activated K+ fluxes (half-maximal stimulation at 2.7 microM free Ca2+) via the Na-Ca-K exchanger in support of the notion that the rod Na-Ca exchanger is in effect a Na-Ca-K exchanger. (d) Competitive interactions between Ca2+ and Na+ ions on the exchanger protein are described.  相似文献   

4.
The Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger from Drosophila was expressed in Xenopus and characterized electrophysiologically using the giant excised patch technique. This protein, termed Calx, shares 49% amino acid identity to the canine cardiac Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger, NCX1. Calx exhibits properties similar to previously characterized Na(+)-Ca2+ exchangers including intracellular Na+ affinities, current-voltage relationships, and sensitivity to the peptide inhibitor, XIP. However, the Drosophila Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger shows a completely opposite response to cytoplasmic Ca2+. Previously cloned Na(+)-Ca2+ exchangers (NCX1 and NCX2) are stimulated by cytoplasmic Ca2+ in the micromolar range (0.1- 10 microM). This stimulation of exchange current is mediated by occupancy of a regulatory Ca2+ binding site separate from the Ca2+ transport site. In contrast, Calx is inhibited by cytoplasmic Ca2+ over this same concentration range. The inhibition of exchange current is evident for both forward and reverse modes of transport. The characteristics of the inhibition are consistent with the binding of Ca2+ at a regulatory site distinct from the transport site. These data provide a rational basis for subsequent structure-function studies targeting the intracellular Ca2+ regulatory mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Ion transport and regulation of Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchange were examined for two alternatively spliced isoforms of the canine cardiac Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger, NCX1.1, to assess the role(s) of the mutually exclusive A and B exons. The exchangers examined, NCX1.3 and NCX1.4, are commonly referred to as the kidney and brain splice variants and differ only in the expression of the BD or AD exons, respectively. Outward Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchange activity was assessed in giant, excised membrane patches from Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing the cloned exchangers, and the characteristics of Na(+)(i)- (i.e., I(1)) and Ca(2+)(i)- (i.e., I(2)) dependent regulation of exchange currents were examined using a variety of experimental protocols. No remarkable differences were observed in the current-voltage relationships of NCX1.3 and NCX1.4, whereas these isoforms differed appreciably in terms of their I(1) and I(2) regulatory properties. Sodium-dependent inactivation of NCX1.3 was considerably more pronounced than that of NCX1.4 and resulted in nearly complete inhibition of steady state currents. This novel feature could be abolished by proteolysis with alpha-chymotrypsin. It appears that expression of the B exon in NCX1.3 imparts a substantially more stable I(1) inactive state of the exchanger than does the A exon of NCX1.4. With respect to I(2) regulation, significant differences were also found between NCX1.3 and NCX1.4. While both exchangers were stimulated by low concentrations of regulatory Ca(2+)(i), NCX1.3 showed a prominent decrease at higher concentrations (>1 microM). This does not appear to be due solely to competition between Ca(2+)(i) and Na(+)(i) at the transport site, as the Ca(2+)(i) affinities of inward currents were nearly identical between the two exchangers. Furthermore, regulatory Ca(2+)(i) had only modest effects on Na(+)(i)-dependent inactivation of NCX1.3, whereas I(1) inactivation of NCX1.4 could be completely eliminated by Ca(2+)(i). Our results establish an important role for the mutually exclusive A and B exons of NCX1 in modulating the characteristics of ionic regulation and provide insight into how alternative splicing tailors the regulatory properties of Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchange to fulfill tissue-specific requirements of Ca(2+) homeostasis.  相似文献   

6.
Although inhibition of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger normally increases [Ca2+]i in neonatal cardiac myocytes, application of the inhibitor Ni2+ appears to reduce [Ca2+] measured by fluo-3. To investigate how the apparent reduction in [Ca2+]i occurs we examined Ca2+ transport by the human Na+/Ca2+ exchanger expressed in Sf9 cells. Transport of Ca2+ by the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger was examined using a laser-scanning confocal microscope and the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator fluo-3, and the electrogenic function was determined by measuring the Na+/Ca2+ exchange current (INaCa) using patch clamp methods. INaCa was elicited with voltage-clamp steps or flash photolysis of caged Ca2+. We show significant expression of Na+/Ca2+ exchanger function in Sf9 cells infected with a recombinant Baculovirus carrying the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. In addition to measurements of INaCa, characterization includes Ca2+ transport via the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger and the voltage dependence of Ca2+ transport. Application of Ni2+ blocked INaCa but, contrary to expectation, decreased fluo-3 fluorescence. Experiments with infected Sf9 cells suggested that Ni2+ was transported via the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger at a rate comparable to the Ca2+ transport. Once inside the cells, Ni2+ reduced fluorescence, presumably by quenching fluo-3. We conclude that Ni2+ does indeed block INaCa, but is also rapidly translocated across the cell membrane by the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger itself, most likely via an electroneutral partial reaction of the exchange cycle.  相似文献   

7.
We have recently described a novel K(+)-dependent Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, NCKX2, that is abundantly expressed in brain neurons (Tsoi, M., Rhee, K.-H., Bungard, D., Li, X.-F., Lee, S.-L., Auer, R. N., and Lytton, J. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 4115--4162). The precise role for NCKX2 in neuronal Ca(2+) homeostasis is not yet clearly understood but will depend upon the functional properties of the molecule. Here, we have performed whole-cell patch clamp analysis to characterize cation dependences and ion stoichiometry for rat brain NCKX2, heterologously expressed in HEK293 cells. Outward currents generated by reverse NCKX2 exchange depended on external Ca(2+) with a K(12) of 1.4 or 101 microm without or with 1 mm Mg(2+), and on external K(+) with a K(1/2) of about 12 or 36 mm with choline or Li(+) as counter ion, respectively. Na(+) inhibited outward currents with a K(1/2) of about 60 mm. Inward currents generated by forward NCKX2 exchange depended upon external Na(+) with a K(1/2) of 30 mm and a Hill coefficient of 2.8. K(+) inhibited the inward currents by a maximum of 40%, with a K(1/2) of 2 mm or less, depending upon the conditions. The transport stoichiometry of NCKX2 was determined by observing the change in reversal potential as individual ion gradients were altered. Our data support a stoichiometry for rat brain NCKX2 of 4 Na(+):(1 Ca(2+) + 1 K(+)). These findings provide the first electrophysiological characterization of rat brain NCKX2, and the first evidence that a single recombinantly expressed NCKX polypeptide encodes a K(+)-transporting Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger with a transport stoichiometry of 4 Na(+):(1 Ca(2+) + 1 K(+)).  相似文献   

8.
Voltage dependence of Na-Ca exchanger conformational currents.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
E Niggli  P Lipp 《Biophysical journal》1994,67(4):1516-1524
Properties of a transient current (Icont) believed to reflect a conformational change of the Na-Ca exchanger molecules after Ca2+ binding were investigated. Intracellular Ca2+ concentration jumps in isolated cardiac myocytes were generated with flash photolysis of caged Ca2+ dimethoxynitrophenamine, and membrane currents were simultaneously measured using the whole-cell variant of the patch-clamp technique. A previously unresolved shallow voltage dependence of Icont was revealed after developing an experimental protocol designed to compensate for the photoconsumption of the caged compound. This voltage dependence can be interpreted to reflect the distribution of Na-Ca exchanger conformational states with the Ca2+ binding site exposed to the inside of the cell immediately before the flash. Analysis performed by fitting a Boltzmann distribution to the observed data suggests that under control conditions most exchanger molecules reside in states with the Ca2+ binding site facing the outside of the cell. Dialysis of the cytosol with 3',4'-dichlorobenzamil, an organic inhibitor of the Na-Ca exchange, increased the magnitude of Icont and changed the voltage dependence, consistent with a parallel shift of the charge/voltage curve. This shift may result from intracellular DCB interfering with an Na(+)-binding or Na(+)-translocating step. These observations are consistent with Icont arising from a charge movement mediated by the Na-Ca exchanger molecules after binding of Ca2+.  相似文献   

9.
Zinc influx, driven by a steep inward electrochemical gradient, plays a fundamental role in zinc signaling and in pathophysiologies linked to intracellular accumulation of toxic zinc. Yet, the cellular transport mechanisms that actively generate or maintain the transmembrane gradients are not well understood. We monitored Na+-dependent Zn2+ transport in HEK293 cells and cortical neurons, using fluorescent imaging. Treatment of the HEK293 cells with CaPO4 precipitates induced Na+-dependent Zn2+ extrusion, against a 500-fold transmembrane zinc gradient, or zinc influx upon reversal of Na+ gradient, thus indicating that Na+/Zn2+ exchange is catalyzing active Zn2+ transport. Depletion of intracellular ATP did not inhibit the Na+-dependent Zn2+ extrusion, consistent with a mechanism involving a secondary active transporter. Inhibitors of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger failed to inhibit Na+-dependent Zn2+ efflux. In addition, zinc transport was unchanged in HEK293 cells heterologously expressing functional cardiac or neuronal Na+/Ca2+ exchangers, thus indicating that the Na+/Zn2+ exchange activity is not mediated by the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. Sodium-dependent zinc exchange, facilitating the removal of intracellular zinc, was also monitored in neurons. To our knowledge, the Na+/Zn2+ exchanger described here is the first example of a mammalian transport mechanism capable of Na+-dependent active extrusion of zinc. Such mechanism is likely to play an important role, not only in generating the transmembrane zinc gradients, but also in protecting cells from the potentially toxic effects of permeation of this ion.  相似文献   

10.
The deduced amino acid sequence of the cardiac sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger has a region which could represent a calmodulin binding site. As calmodulin binding regions of proteins often have an autoinhibitory role, a synthetic peptide with this sequence was tested for functional effects on Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange activity. The peptide inhibits the Na(+)-dependent Ca2+ uptake (KI approximately 1.5 microM) and the Nao(+)-dependent Ca2+ efflux of sarcolemmal vesicles in a noncompetitive manner with respect to both Na+ and Ca2+. The peptide is also a potent inhibitor (KI approximately 0.1 microM) of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange current of excised sarcolemmal patches. The binding site for the peptide on the exchanger is on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. The exchanger inhibitory peptide binds calmodulin with a moderately high affinity. From the characteristics of the inhibition of the exchange of sarcolemmal vesicles, we deduce that only inside-out sarcolemmal vesicles participate in the usual Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange assay. This contrasts with the common assumption that both inside-out and right-side-out vesicles exhibit exchange activity.  相似文献   

11.
The transport of Na+ and Ca2+ ions in the cardiac Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger can be described as separate events (Khananshvili, D. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2437-2442). Thus, the Na(+)-Na+ and Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange reactions reflect reversible partial reactions of the transport cycle. The effect of diffusion potentials (K(+)-valinomycin) on different modes of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger (Na(+)-Ca2+, Ca(2+)-Ca2+, and Na(+)-Na+ exchanges) were tested in reconstituted proteoliposomes, obtained from the Triton X-100 extracts of the cardiac sarcolemmal membranes. The initial rates of the Nai-dependent 45Ca-uptake (t = 1 s) were measured in EGTA-entrapped proteoliposomes at different voltages. At the fixed values of voltage [45 Ca]o was varied from 4 to 122 microM, and [Na]i was saturating (150 mM). Upon varying delta psi from -94 to +91 mV, the Vmax values were increased from 9.5 +/- 0.5 to 26.5 +/- 1.5 nmol.mg-1.s-1 and the Km from 17.8 +/- 2.5 to 39.1 +/- 5.2 microM, while the Vmax/Km values ranged from only 0.53 +/- 0.08 to 0.73 +/- 0.17 nmol.mg-1.s-1.microM-1. The equilibrium Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange was voltage sensitive at very low [Ca]o = [Ca]i = 2 microM, while at saturating [Ca]o = [Ca]i = 200 microM the Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange became voltage-insensitive. The rates of the equilibrium Na(+)-Na+ exchange appears to be voltage insensitive at saturating [Na]o = [Na]i = 160 mM. Under the saturating ionic conditions, the rates of the Na(+)-Na+ exchange were at least 2-3-fold slower than the Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange. The following conclusions can be drawn. (a) The near constancy of the Vmax/Km for Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange at different voltages is compatible with the ping-pong model proposed previously. (b) The effects of voltage on Vmax of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange are consistent with the existence of a single charge carrying transport step. (c) It is not yet possible to clearly assign this step to the Na+ or Ca2+ transport half of the cycle although it is more likely that 3Na(+)-transport is a charge carrying step. Thus, the unloaded ion-binding domain contains either -2 or -3 charges (presumably carboxyl groups). (d) The binding of Na+ and Ca2+ appears to be weakly voltage-sensitive. The Ca(2+)-binding site may form a small ion-well (less than 2-3 A).  相似文献   

12.
The role of the Na/Ca exchanger in the control of cellular excitability and tension development is a subject of current interest in cardiac physiology. It has been suggested that this coupled transporter is responsible for rapid changes in intracellular calcium activity during single beats, generation of plateau currents, which control action potential duration, and control of intracellular sodium during Na/K pump suppression, which may occur during terminal states of ischemia. The actual behavior of this exchanger is likely to be complex for several reasons. First, the exchanger transports two ionic species and thus its instantaneous flux rate depends on both intracellular sodium and calcium activity. Secondly, the alteration in intracellular calcium activity, which is caused by a given transmembrane calcium flux, and which controls the subsequent exchanger rate, is a complex function of available intracellular calcium buffering. The buffers convert the ongoing transmembrane calcium fluxes into changes in activity that are a small and variable fraction of the change in total calcium concentration. Using a number of simple assumptions, we model changes in intracellular calcium and sodium concentration under the influence of Na/Ca exchange, Na/K ATPase and Ca-ATPase pumps, and passive sodium and calcium currents during periods of suppression and reactivation of the Na/K ATPase pump. The goal is to see whether and to what extent general notions of the role of the Na/Ca exchanger used in planning and interpreting experimental studies are consistent with its function as derived from current mechanistic assumptions about the exchanger. We find, for example, that based on even very high estimates of intracellular calcium buffering, it is unlikely that Na/Ca exchange alone can control intracellular sodium during prolonged Na/K pump blockade. It is also shown that Na/Ca exchange can contaminate measurements of Na/K pump currents under a variety of experimental conditions. The way in which these and other functions are affected by the dissociation constants and total capacity of the intracellular calcium buffers are also explored in detail.  相似文献   

13.
A mechanism is developed for Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange using a new approach made possible by the availability of computer software that allows the systematic search of a large parameter space for optimum sets of parameters to fit multiple sets of experimental data. The approach was to make the experimental data dictate the form of the mechanism: the qualitative features of the data dictating the number and nature of the states of the exchanger and their interrelationship, and the quantitative aspects of the data dictating the values of the rate constants that govern the amount of each state relative to the total amount of exchanger. A single set of experimental data served this initial purpose, namely, observations of equilibrium Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange in cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles (Slaughter et al., 1983, J. biol. Chem. 258, 3183-3190). From this data a minimum mechanism was induced having 56 states (SYM56), which gave satisfactory quantitative fits to the experimental data. With this set of parameters additional experimental data were fitted, from the same preparation, the single cardiac cell and the squid giant axon, with some changes in parameters, but none dramatic. In spite of the symmetric nature of the mechanism, i.e. binding constants for Na+ and Ca2+ do not depend on the orientation of the binding sites, the mechanism exhibits marked asymmetric behavior similar to that observed experimentally. Finally, in accounting for Ca(2+)-Ca2+ exchange in the absence of monovalent cations, Ca2+ influx becomes dependent on intracellular Ca(2+)--an unexpected outcome--exactly in keeping with the "essential activator" role of intracellular Ca2+ observed by DiPolo & Beaugé (1987, J. gen. Physiol. 90, 505-525). Observations of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange in the retinal rod outer segment are well fitted with a simplified version of SYM56 comprising 25 states (namely, SYM25), supporting the notion that the exchanger in the retinal rod outer segment differs from that in cardiac sarcolemma and squid axon. Maximum turnover rate of 840 sec-1 for SYM56 and 20 sec-1 for SYM25 are comparable to those reported for the exchanger in cardiac muscle and retinal rod outer segment, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The Na+-Ca2+ exchange mechanism in cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles can catalyze the exchange of Ca2+ on either side of the sarcolemmal membrane for Na+ on the opposing side. Little is known regarding the relative affinities of Na+ and Ca2+ for exchanger binding sites on the intra- and extracellular membrane surfaces. We have previously reported (Philipson, K.D. and Nishimoto, A.Y. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 5111-5117) a method for measuring the Na+-Ca2+ exchange of only the inside-out vesicles in a mixed population of sarcolemmal vesicles (predominantly right-side-out). We concluded that the apparent Km(Ca2+) for Na+i-dependent Ca2+ uptake was similar for inside-out and right-side-out vesicles. In the present study, we examine in detail Na+o-dependent Ca2+ efflux from both the inside-out and the total population of vesicles. To load vesicles with Ca2+ prior to measurement of Ca2+ efflux, four methods are used: 1, Na+-Ca2+ exchange; 2, passive Ca2+ diffusion; 3, ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake; 4, exchange of Ca2+ for Na+ which has been actively transported into vesicles by the Na+ pump. The first two methods load all sarcolemmal vesicles with Ca2+, while the latter two methods selectively load inside-out vesicles with Ca2+. We are able to conclude that the dependence of Ca2+ efflux on the external Na+ concentration is similar in inside-out and right-side-out vesicles. Thus the apparent Km(Na+) values (approximately equal to 30 mM) of the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger are similar on the two surfaces of the sarcolemmal membrane. In other experiments, external Na+ inhibited the Na+i-dependent Ca2+ uptake of the total population of vesicles much more potently than that of the inside-out vesicles. Apparently Na+ can compete for the Ca2+ binding site more effectively on the external surface of right-side-out than on the external surface of inside-out vesicles. Thus, although affinities for Na+ or Ca2+ (in the absence of the other ion) appear symmetrical, the interactions between Na+ and Ca2+ at the two sides of the exchanger are not the same. The Na+-Ca2+ exchanger is not a completely symmetrical transport protein.  相似文献   

15.
Dong H  Dunn J  Lytton J 《Biophysical journal》2002,82(4):1943-1952
The stoichiometry with which the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger, NCX1, binds and transports Na+ and Ca2+ has dramatic consequences for ionic homeostasis and cellular function of heart mycocytes and brain neurons, where the exchanger is highly expressed. Previous studies have examined this question using native NCX1 in its endogenous environment. We describe here whole-cell voltage clamp studies using recombinant rat heart NCX1.1 expressed heterologously in HEK-293 cells. This system provides the advantages of a high level of NCX1 protein expression, very low background ion transport levels, and excellent control over clamped voltage and ionic composition. Using ionic conditions that allowed bi-directional currents, voltage ramps were employed to determine the reversal potential for NCX1.1-mediated currents. Analysis of the relation between reversal potential and external [Na+] or [Ca2+], under a variety of intracellular conditions, yielded coupling ratios for Na+ of 1.9-2.3 ions per net charge and for Ca2+ of 0.45 +/- 0.03 ions per net charge. These data are consistent with a stoichiometry for the NCX1.1 protein of 4 Na+ to 1 Ca2+ to 2 charges moved per transport cycle.  相似文献   

16.
The whole-cell patch-clamp technique coupled with intracellular [Ca2+] measurements was used to investigate the sodium-calcium exchange mechanism in rat skeletal muscle cells in primary culture. Replacing external Na+ ions with Li+ or N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMDG+) ions generated outward currents which were correlated with significant increases of free cytosolic-calcium concentration. These results strongly argue for a functional Na+-Ca2+ exchange mechanism working in its reverse mode. Moreover, the outward currents were sensitive to the new compound KB-R7943 (10 microM), which has been shown to be a potent inhibitor of the sodium-calcium exchanger. Outward Na+-Ca2+ exchange current densities were reduced in the presence of external Li+ as compared to those measured in the presence of NMDG+. After replacing internal sodium by lithium ions, rapid changes of external lithium concentrations generated sarcolemmal currents which were accompanied by subsequent variations of intracellular calcium activity. The currents were dependent on extracellular Li+ with a half-maximal activation at 67 mM and a Hill coefficient of 2.9. This work shows that the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger is able to significantly influence the myoplasmic calcium concentration of cultured rat myotubes. On the other hand, our results suggest that Li+ ions may substitute Na+ ions to catalyse an electrogenic Li+/Ca2+ counter transport.  相似文献   

17.
The sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger is regulated by intracellular Ca2+ at a high affinity Ca2+ binding site separate from the Ca2+ transport site. Previous data have suggested that the Ca2+ regulatory site is located on the large intracellular loop of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange protein, and we have identified a high-affinity 45Ca2+ binding domain on this loop (Levitsky, D. O., D. A. Nicoll, and K. D. Philipson. 1994. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 269:22847-22852). We now use electrophysiological and mutational analyses to further define the Ca2+ regulatory site. Wild-type and mutant exchangers were expressed in Xenopus oocytes, and the exchange current was measured using the inside- out giant membrane patch technique. Ca2+ regulation was measured as the stimulation of reverse Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange (intracellular Na+ exchanging for extracellular Ca2+) by intracellular Ca2+. Single-site mutations within two acidic clusters of the Ca2+ binding domain lowered the apparent Ca2+ affinity at the regulatory site from 0.4 to 1.1-1.8 microM. Mutations had parallel effects on the affinity of the exchanger loop for 45Ca2+ binding (Levitsky et al., 1994) and for functional Ca2+ regulation. We conclude that we have identified the functionally important Ca2+ binding domain. All mutant exchangers with decreased apparent affinities at the regulatory Ca2+ binding site also have a complex pattern of altered kinetic properties. The outward current of the wild-type Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger declines with a half time (th) of 10.8 +/- 3.2 s upon Ca2+ removal, whereas the exchange currents of several mutants decline with th values of 0.7-4.3 s. Likewise, Ca2+ regulation mutants respond more rapidly to Ca2+ application. Study of Ca2+ regulation has previously been possible only with the exchanger operating in the reverse mode as the regulatory Ca2+ and the transported Ca2+ are then on opposite sides of the membrane. The use of exchange mutants with low affinity for Ca2+ at regulatory sites also allows demonstration of secondary Ca2+ regulation with the exchanger in the forward or Ca2+ efflux mode. In addition, we find that the affinity of wild-type and mutant Na(+)-Ca2+ exchangers for intracellular Na+ decreases at low regulatory Ca2+. This suggests that Ca2+ regulation modifies transport properties and does not only control the fraction of exchangers in an active state.  相似文献   

18.
Voltage-gated proton channels were studied under voltage clamp in excised, inside-out patches of human eosinophils, at various pHi with pHo 7.5 or 6.5 pipette solutions. H+ current fluctuations were observed consistently when the membrane was depolarized to voltages that activated H+ current. At pHi < or = 5.5 the variance increased nonmonotonically with depolarization to a maximum near the midpoint of the H+ conductance-voltage relationship, gH-V, and then decreased, supporting the idea that the noise is generated by H+ channel gating. Power spectral analysis indicated Lorentzian and 1/f components, both related to H+ currents. Unitary H+ current amplitude was estimated from stationary or quasi-stationary variance, sigmaH2. We analyze sigmaH2 data obtained at various voltages on a linearized plot that provides estimates of both unitary conductance and the number of channels in the patch, without requiring knowledge of open probability. The unitary conductance averaged 38 fS at pHi 6.5, and increased nearly fourfold to 140 fS at pHi 5.5, but was independent of pHo. In contrast, the macroscopic gH was only 1.8-fold larger at pHi 5.5 than at pHi 6.5. The maximum H+ channel open probability during large depolarizations was 0.75 at pHi 6.5 and 0.95 at pHi 5.5. Because the unitary conductance increases at lower pHi more than the macroscopic gH, the number of functional channels must decrease. Single H+ channel currents were too small to record directly at physiological pH, but at pHi < or = 5.5 near Vthreshold (the voltage at which gH turns on), single channel-like current events were observed with amplitudes 7-16 fA.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated temperature dependence of Ca2+ uptake by the cardiac sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger from dog, rabbit and bullfrog. In native rabbit sarcolemmal vesicles, Ca2+ affinity of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger is unchanged from 7 to 37 degrees C; however, the initial velocity of Ca2+ uptake declines much more steeply below 22 degrees C than above 22 degrees C. In native dog sarcolemma, the temperature dependence of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange velocity is similar to that of native rabbit. However, in frog heart the velocity of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange declines much more slowly with decreasing temperature at both temperature ranges. Reconstitution of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger into artificial lipid vesicles consisting of either asolectin or phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol has little effect on temperature dependence of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange velocity in any of the three species. We conclude that the lesser temperature sensitivity of the cardiac sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger of a poikilothermic species is at least partly an intrinsic property of the transport protein.  相似文献   

20.
The flow of Ca ions through single Ca channels has been examined. The gigaseal method was used on identifiable snail neurons that were voltage clamped using a two-microelectrode voltage clamp method. Average Ca patch currents and whole cell currents have similar time courses. They are affected similarly by changes in temperature. The differences in amplitude and inactivation between Ba and Ca whole cell currents were present in the patch records. The stationary noise spectra recorded from ensembles of multichannel patches have two components with fast and slow time constants equivalent to two components in the whole cell tail current relaxations. Elementary current amplitudes measured from the variance-mean relationship and from noise spectra gave values comparable to measurements from single channels. The single channel I-V relationship was curvilinear and the maximum slope conductance in 40 mM Cao was 7 pS. The amplitude of unitary currents was unchanged at long times when inactivation had occurred; hence depletion is not involved in this process. Channel density was approximately 3 microns-2 and was the same for Ba and Ca currents. The whole cell asymmetry currents gave very large values for the gating charge per channel. Changes in temperature from 29 to 9 degrees C had only a slight effect on the two Ca tail current tau's at potentials where turn-on of patch and whole cell currents was markedly slowed and the peak amplitudes were reduced by one-third. Single channel recordings were obtained at these two temperatures, and the mean open time and the fast component of the closed times were scarcely affected. Unit amplitudes were reduced by 30% and the slow closed time component was doubled. Therefore, peak currents and the slow closed time component was doubled. Therefore, peak currents were reduced partly as a result of the reduction in unit amplitude, but mainly as a result of a reduction in opening probability, the latter arising from an increase of the long closed times. It is concluded that the behavior of single Ca channels in membrane patches is the same as it is in whole cells. Cooling from 29 to 9 degrees C acts primarily on transitions among closed states and has little effect on the open to closed transition.  相似文献   

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