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1.
In previous studies elevation of intracellular Ca2+ was shown to cause prolonged reduction of two voltage-dependent K+ currents (IA and ICa2+-K+) across the membrane of the isolated Hermissenda photoreceptor, the type B cell (Alkon et al., 1982b; Alkon and Sakakibara, 1985). Here we show that iontophoretic injection of inositol trisphosphate (IP3), but not inositol monophosphate, also caused prolonged reduction of IA and ICa2+-K+. IP3 injection also caused reduction of a light-induced K+ current (also ICa2+-K+) but did not affect the voltage-dependent Ca2+ current, ICa2+, or the light-induced inward current, INa+, of the type B cell. IP3 injection caused similar effects on the K+ currents of the other type of Hermissenda photoreceptor, the type A cell. INA+ of the type A cell, unlike that of the type B cell, was, however, markedly increased following IP3 injection. The differences of IP3 effects on the two types of photoreceptors may be related to differences in regulation of ionic currents by endogenous IP3 as reflected by clear differences (before injection) in the magnitude of IA, ICa2+-K+, and INa+ between the two cell types.  相似文献   

2.
Pharmacologic activation of endogenous protein kinase C (PKC) together with elevation of the intracellular Ca2+ level was previously shown to cause reduction of two voltage-dependent K+ currents (IA and ICa2+-K+) across the soma membrane of the type B photoreceptor within the eye of the mollusc Hermissenda crassicornis. Similar effects were also found to persist for days after acquisition of a classically conditioned response. Also, the state of phosphorylation of a low-molecular-weight protein was changed only within the eyes of conditioned Hermissenda. To examine the role of PKC in causing K+ current changes as well as changes of phosphorylation during conditioning (and possibly other physiologic contexts), we studied here the effects of endogenous PKC activation and exogenous PKC injection on phosphorylation and K+ channel function. Several phosphoproteins (20, 25, 56, and 165 kilodaltons) showed differences in phosphorylation in response to PKC activators applied to intact nervous systems or to isolated eyes. Specific differences were observed for membrane and cytosolic fractions in response to both the phorbol ester 12-deoxyphorbol 13-isobutyrate 20-acetate (DPBA) or exogenous PKC in the presence of Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine/diacylglycerol. Type B cells pretreated with DPBA responded to PKC injection with a persistent reduction of K+ currents. In the absence of DPBA, PKC injection also caused K+ current reduction only following Ca2+ loading conditions. However, the direct effect of PKC injection in the absence of DPBA was only to increase ICa2+-K+. According to a proposed model, the amplitude of the K+ currents would depend on the steady-state balance of effects mediated by PKC within the cytoplasm and membrane-associated PKC. The model further specifies that the effects on K+ currents of cytoplasmic PKC require an intervening proteolytic step. Such a model predicts that increasing the concentration of cytoplasmic protease, e.g., with trypsin, will increase K+ currents, whereas blocking endogenous protease, e.g., with leupeptin, will decrease K+ currents. These effects should be opposed by preexposure of the cells to DPBA. Furthermore, prior injection of leupeptin should block or reverse the effects of subsequent injection of PKC into the type B cell. All of these predictions were confirmed by results reported here. Taken together, the results of this and previous studies suggest that PKC regulation of membrane excitability critically depends on its cellular locus. The implications of such function for long-term physiologic transformations are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
In mammalian systems, Ca2+/diacylglycerol-activated phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (C-kinase) appears to play an important role in regulating physiological responses that outlast the transient rise in cytosolic Ca2+. Electrophysiological experiments in neurons of the nudibranch mollusc, Hermissenda crassicornis, have suggested a role for C-kinase in the long-lasting reductions in early and late K+ currents that have been observed following associative learning. Accordingly, we have investigated the catalytic properties of C-kinase in Hermissenda CNS. Following homogenization in Ca2+-free buffer, C-kinase can be separated from Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase by centrifugation; C-kinase activity is found in the supernatant whereas essentially all of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase is found in the membrane fraction. Addition of Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, and diacylglycerol to the cytosol results in phosphorylation of at least eight endogenous proteins. The Hermissenda CNS C-kinase can also phosphorylate lysine-rich histone, a substrate for mammalian C-kinase. The molluscan enzyme exhibits phospholipid specificity in that phosphatidylserine is much more effective than phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol, and phosphatidic acid. Addition of diacylglycerol, in the presence of Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine, increases the activity of the C-kinase. The percentage of activation by diacylglycerol is larger at lower Ca2+ concentrations. Enzyme activity is inhibited by trifluoperazine and polymixin B sulfate. These studies indicate that the Hermissenda C-kinase is catalytically similar to mammalian C-kinase.  相似文献   

4.
Two-microelectrode voltage clamp studies were performed on the somata of Hermissenda Type B photoreceptors that had been isolated by axotomy from all synaptic interaction as well as any impulse-generating (i.e., active) membrane. In the presence of 2-10 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and 100 mM tetraethylammonium ion (TEA), which eliminated two previously described voltage-dependent potassium currents (IA and the delayed rectifier), a voltage-dependent outward current was apparent in the steady state responses to command voltage steps more positive than -40 mV (absolute). This current increased with increasing external Ca++. The magnitude of the outward current decreased and an inward current became apparent following EGTA injection. Substitution of external Ba++ for Ca++ also made the inward current more apparent. This inward current, which was almost eliminated after being exposed for approximately 5 min to a solution in which external Ca++ was replaced with Cd++, was maximally activated at approximately 0 mV. Elevation of external potassium allowed the calcium (ICa++) and calcium-dependent K+ (IC) currents to be substantially separated. Command pulses to 0 mV elicited maximal ICa++ but no IC because no K+ currents flowed at their new reversal potential (0 mV) in 300 mM K+. At a holding potential of -60 mV, which was now more negative than the potassium equilibrium potential, EK+, in 300 mM K+, IC appeared as an inward tail current after positive command steps. The voltage dependence of ICa++ was demonstrated with positive steps in 100 mM Ba++, 4-AP, and TEA. Other data indicated that in 10 mM Ca++, IC underwent pronounced and prolonged inactivation whereas ICa++ did not. When the photoreceptor was stimulated with a light step (with the membrane potential held at -60 mV), there was also a prolonged inactivation of IC. In elevated external Ca++, ICa++ also showed similar inactivation. These data suggest that IC may undergo prolonged inactivation due to a direct effect of elevated intracellular Ca++, as was previously shown for a voltage-dependent potassium current, IA. These results are discussed in relation to the production of training-induced changes of membrane currents on retention days of associative learning.  相似文献   

5.
Two-microelectrode voltage-clamp measurements were made to determine the kinetics and voltage dependence of ionic currents across the soma membrane of the Hermissenda type B photoreceptor. The voltage-dependent outward potassium currents, IA and ICa(2+)-K+, the inward voltage-dependent calcium current, ICa2+ and the light-induced current, IIgt, were then described with Hodgkin-Huxley-type equations. The fast-activating and inactivating potassium current, IA, was described by the equation; IA(t) = gA(max)(ma infinity[1-exp(-t/tau ma)])3 x (ha infinity [1-exp(-t/tau ha)] + exp(-t/tau ha)) (Vm-EK), where the parameters ma infinity, ha infinity, tau ma, and tau ha are functions of membrane potential, Vm, and ma infinity and ha infinity are steady-state activation and inactivation parameters. Similarly, the calcium-dependent outward potassium current, ICa(2+)-K+, was described by the equation, ICa(2+)-K+ (t) = gc(max)(mc infinity(VC)(1-exp[-t/tau mc (VC)]))pc (hc infinity(VC) [1-exp(-t/tau hc)] + exp(-t/tau hc(VC)])pc(VC-EK). In high external potassium, ICa(2+)-K+ could be measured in approximate isolation from other currents as a voltage-dependent inward tail current following a depolarizing command pulse from a holding potential of -60 mV. A voltage-dependent inward calcium current across the type B soma membrane, ICa2+, activated rapidly, showed little inactivation, and was described by the equation: ICa2+ = gCa(max) [1 + exp](-Vm-5)/7]-1 (Vm-ECa), where gCa(max) was 0.5 microS. The light-induced current with both fast and slow phases was described by: IIgt(t) = IIgt1 + IIgt2 + IIgt3, IIgti = gIgti [1-exp(- ton/tau mi)] exp(-ton/tau hi)(Vm-EIgti) (i = 1, 2).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
A series of studies on Hermissenda classical conditioning has lead to a discovery that the biophysical events (accumulation of Ca2+ and depolarization in B cell) found during memory acquisition are clearly distinct from those (suppression of K-currents, IA and ICa2+K+) detected in the retention phase of memory. Biochemical analysis of eyes isolated shortly after (a few hours) training revealed increased phosphorylation of a 20,000 M.W. protein which is very likely one of the substrates for both Ca/CaM-dependent protein kinase and C-kinase and possibly a locus of convergence for conditioned stimulus and unconditioned stimulus pathways. Furthermore, conditioning-specific changes in the two K+ currents have been reproduced by simultaneous activation of the CaM-kinase pathway (via iontophoretic injection of CaM-kinase II plus Ca2+-load or IP3 injection) and the C-kinase pathway (via bath application of phorbol-ester or diacylglycerol analog plus Ca2+-load). Therefore, synergistic interaction between the two Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation systems in the identified B cell is considered to be critically important for acquisition of associative memory. Evidence also has been obtained for similar biophysical changes and molecular mechanisms during retention of classical conditioning in the mammalian brain. Further work will be needed to uncover the biochemical mechanism(s) responsible for transforming short-term into long-lasting memory.  相似文献   

7.
The effects on cytosolic Ca2+ concentration of 2-chloroadenosine and [L-Pro9]-substance P, a selective agonist of NK1 receptors, were investigated on astrocytes from embryonic mice in primary culture. Cells responded to [L-Pro9]-substance P with a transitory increase in cytosolic Ca2+ which was of shorter duration when external Ca2+ was removed. A transient response to 2-chloroadenosine alone occurred. When simultaneously applied, [L-Pro9]-substance P and 2-chloroadenosine evoked a prolonged elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ (up to 30 min). This phenomenon was dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+, but insensitive to dihydropyridines, La3+, and Co2+, excluding the implication of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels. Arachidonic acid also induced a sustained elevation of cytosolic Ca2+, but did not increase further the response evoked by [L-Pro9]-substance P and 2-chloroadenosine. The activation of protein kinase C by a diacylglycerol analogue mimicked the effect of [L-Pro9]-substance P in potentiating the 2-chloroadenosine-evoked response. Like 2-chloroadenosine, pinacidil, which hyperpolarizes the cells by opening K+ channels, prolonged the elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration induced by [L-Pro9]-substance P. Conversely, depolarization with 50 mM KCl canceled the effects of either pinacidil or 2-chloroadenosine applied with [L-Pro9]-substance P. Pertussis toxin pretreatment suppressed all the effects induced by 2-chloroadenosine.  相似文献   

8.
A role of pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive pathway in regulation of glucose-stimulated Ca2+ signaling in rat islet beta-cells was investigated by using clonidine as a selective agonist to alpha2-adrenoceptors which link to the pathway. An elevation of extracellular glucose concentration from 5.5 to 22.2 mM (glucose stimulation) increased the levels of [Ca2+]i of beta-cells, and clonidine reversibly reduced the elevated levels of [Ca2+]i. This clonidine effect was antagonized by yohimbine, and abolished in beta-cells pre-treated with PTX. Clonidine showed little effect on membrane currents including those through ATP-sensitive K+ channels induced by voltage ramps from -90 to -50 mV. Clonidine showed little effect on the magnitude of whole-cell currents through L-type Ca2+ channels (ICa(L)), but increased the inactivation process of the currents. Clonidine increased the magnitude of the voltage-dependent K+ currents (IVK). These clonidine effects on ICa(L) and IVK were abolished in beta-cells treated with PTX or GDP-betaS. These results suggest that the PTX-sensitive pathway increases IVK activity and decreases ICa(L) activity of islet beta-cells, resulting in a decrease in the levels of [Ca2+]i elevated by depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry. This mechanism seems responsible at least in part for well-known inhibitory action of PTX-sensitive pathway on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from islet beta-cells.  相似文献   

9.
Apart from their primary function as balance sensors, Hermissenda hair cells are presynaptic neurons involved in the Ca(2+)-dependent neuronal plasticity in postsynaptic B photoreceptors that accompanies classical conditioning. With a view to beginning to understand presynaptic mechanisms of plasticity in the vestibulo-visual system, a locus for conditioning-induced neuronal plasticity, outward currents that may govern the excitability of hair cells were recorded by means of a whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Three K+ currents were characterized: a 4-aminopyridine-sensitive transient outward K+ current (IA), a tetraethyl ammonium-sensitive delayed rectifier K+ current (IK,V), and a Ca(2+)-activated K+ current (IK,Ca). IA activates and decays rapidly; the steady-state activation and inactivation curves of the current reveal a window current close to the apparent resting voltage of the hair cells, suggesting that the current is partially activated at rest. By modulating firing frequency and perhaps damping membrane oscillations, IA may regulate synaptic release at baseline. In contrast, IK,V and IK,Ca have slow onset and exhibit little or no inactivation. These two K+ currents may determine the duration of the repolarization phase of hair-cell action potentials and hence synaptic release via Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. In addition, IK,Ca may be responsible for the afterhyperpolarization of hair cell membrane voltage following prolonged stimulation.  相似文献   

10.
1. Na+ as well as Li+ move across the apical membrane through amiloride-sensitive ionic channels. 2. K+ movements across the apical membrane occur through Ba2+- and Cs+-sensitive channels which do not allow the passage of Na+ or Li+. 3. A third pathway in the apical membrane is permeable for Na+, K+, Cs+, Rb+, NH+4 and Ti+. The currents carried by these monovalent cations are blocked by Ca2+ and divalent cations as well as La3+. 4. In the urinary bladder, the Ca2+-sensitive currents are stimulated by oxytocin, activators of cytosolic cAMP and cAMP analogues. Also the oxytocin activated currents are blocked by divalent cations and La3+. 5. Nanomolar concentrations of mucosal Ag+ activate the third channel and open the pathway for movements of Ca2+, Ba2+ and Mg2+, which are known to permeate through Ca2+ channels in excitable tissues.  相似文献   

11.
Type B photoreceptors of the nudibranch mollusc Hermissenda crassicornis receive excitatory synaptic potentials (EPSPs) whose frequency is controlled by potential changes of a neighboring cell known as the S optic ganglion cell which is thought to be electrically coupled to the presynaptic source of these EPSPs, the E optic ganglion cell. The frequency of the EPSPs increases when a conditioned stimulus (light) is paired with an unconditioned stimulus (rotation) during acquisition of a Pavlovian conditioned response. The results of the present study are consistent with an adrenergic origin for these EPSPs. Noradrenergic agonists (greater than 100 microM), norepinephrine and clonidine, only slightly depolarize the type B cell but clearly prolong its depolarizing response to light. Serotonin, by contrast, causes hyperpolarization of the type B cell's resting potential as well as after a light step. Clonidine reduces voltage-dependent outward K+ currents (IA, an early current, ICa2+-K+, a late Ca2+-dependent current) that control the type B cell's excitability (and thus its light response and membrane potential). These effects of clonidine are reduced or blocked by the alpha 2-receptor antagonist, yohimbine (0.5 microM), but not the alpha 1-blocker, prazosin. The same yohimbine concentration also blocked depolarizing synaptic excitation of the type B cell in response to depolarization of a simultaneously impaled S optic ganglion cell. Histochemical techniques (both the glyoxylic acid method of de la Torre and Surgeon and the formaldehyde-induced fluorescence or Falck-Hillarp method) demonstrated the presence of a biogenic amine(s) within a single neuron in each optic ganglion as well as three or four cells within the vicinity of previously identified visual interneurons. No serotonergic neurons were found within the optic ganglion or in proximity to visual interneurons. A clonidine-like synaptic effect on type B cells, therefore, could amplify conditioning-specific changes of membrane currents by increasing type B depolarization and possibly, as well, by elevating intracellular second messengers.  相似文献   

12.
Stimulation of fura-2-loaded human neutrophils with formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) or ionomycin elevated the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+], to a maintained elevated level. Activation of protein kinase C (C-kinase) with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, 4 beta-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate or dioctanoylglycerol caused decreases in [Ca2+]i from this level. 4 alpha-Phorbol didecanoate, which does not activate C-kinase, had no effect. These results confirm previous reports that C-kinase activation decreases neutrophil [Ca2+]i by stimulating removal of Ca2+ from the cytosol. Further experiments showed that activation of C-kinase attenuated the component of the FMLP-stimulated [Ca2+]i rise that was dependent on external Ca2+. C-kinase activation also inhibited FMLP-stimulated entry of the quenching cation, Mn2+, used as an indicator of bivalent-cation entry. In contrast, C-kinase activation caused only a partial inhibition of FMLP-stimulated release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. 4 alpha-Phorbol didecanoate was ineffective in inhibiting Ca2+ entry, Mn2+ entry and intracellular Ca2+ release. Addition of FMLP also stimulated a decrease in the ionomycin-elevated [Ca2+]i, and this effect was blocked by staurosporine, a protein kinase inhibitor. These results show that, in addition to stimulating Ca2+ efflux, C-kinase activation in neutrophils inhibits FMLP-stimulated entry of bivalent cations, and partially inhibits intracellular release of Ca2+. Further, FMLP itself can modulate [Ca2+]i by activation of C-kinase.  相似文献   

13.
Iontophoretic injection of Ca2+ causes reduction of I0A (an early rapidly activating and inactivating K+ current) and I0C (a late Ca2+-dependent K+ current) measured across the isolated type B soma membrane (Alkon et al., 1984, 1985; Alkon and Sakakibara, 1984, 1985). Similarly, voltage-clamp conditions which cause elevation of [Ca2+]i are followed by reduction of I0A and I0C lasting 1-3 min. Iontophoretic injection of highly purified Ca2+/CaM-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) isolated from brain tissue (Goldenring et al., 1983) enhanced and prolonged this Ca2+-mediated reduction of I0A and I0C. ICa2+, a voltage-dependent Ca2+ current, also showed some persistent reduction under these conditions. Iontophoretic injection of heat-inactivated enzyme had no effect. Agents that inhibit or block Ca2+/CaM-dependent phosphorylation produced increased I0A and I0C amplitudes and prevented the effects of CaM kinase II injection. The results reported here and in other studies implicate Ca2+-stimulated phosphorylation in the regulation of type B soma ionic currents.  相似文献   

14.
Influx of Ca2+ via Ca2+ channels is the major step triggering exocytosis of pituitary somatotropes to release growth hormone (GH). Voltage-gated Ca2+ and K+ channels, the primary determinants of the influx of Ca2+, are regulated by GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) through G-protein-coupled intracellular signalling systems. Using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques, the changes of the Ca2+ and K+ currents in primary cultured ovine and human somatotropes were recorded. Growth hormone-releasing hormone (10 nmol/L) increased both L- and T-type voltage-gated Ca2+ currents. Inhibition of the cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway by either Rp-cAMP or H89 blocked this increase in both L- and T-type Ca2+ currents. Growth hormone-releasing hormone also decreased voltage-gated transient (IA) and delayed rectified (IK) K+ currents. Protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors, such as calphostin C, chelerythrine or downregulation of PKC, blocked the effect of GHRH on K+ currents, whereas an acute activation of PKC by phorbol 12, 13-dibutyrate (1 micromol/L) mimicked the effect of GHRH. Intracellular dialysis of a specific PKC inhibitor (PKC19-36) also prevented the reduction in K+ currents by GHRH. It is therefore concluded that GHRH increases voltage-gated Ca2+ currents via cAMP/PKA, but decreases voltage-gated K+ currents via the PKC signalling system. The GHRH-induced alteration of Ca2+ and K+ currents augments the influx of Ca2+, leading to an increase in [Ca2+]i and the GH secretion.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of bethanidine sulphate, a pharmacological analog of the cardiac antibrillatory drug, bretylium tosylate, were studied on action potentials (APs) and K+, Na+, and Ca2+ currents of single cultured embryonic chick heart cells using the whole-cell current clamp and voltage clamp technique. Extracellular application of bethanidine (3 X 10(-4) M) increased the overshoot and the duration of the APs and greatly decreased the outward K+ current (IK) and potentiated the inward fast Na+ currents (INa) and the inward slow calcium current (ICa). However, intracellular introduction of bethanidine (10(-4) M) blocked INa. In isolated atria of rat, bethanidine increased the force of contraction in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that when applied extracellularly, bethanidine exerts a potentiating effect on the myocardial fast Na+ current and slow Ca2+ current and an inhibitory effect of IK. The positive inotropic effect of bethanidine could be due, at least in part, to an increase of Ca2+ influx via the slow Ca2+ channel and the Na-Ca exchange. It is suggested that the decrease of IK by bethanidine may account for its antifibrillatory action.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphoproteins in the CNS of the nudibranch mollusc, Hermissenda crassicornis, were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. After preincubation in artificial sea-water containing 32P, nervous systems were exposed to elevation of external K+ (100 or 300 mM) for a period (e.g., 30 min) approximating a period of depolarization which occurs during classical conditioning. Elevated external K+ was found to change the state of phosphorylation of three distinct proteins (Mr 56,000, 25,000, and 20,000) in three distinct ways without consistently changing that of any other proteins. Phosphorylation of an Mr 56,000 protein was increased by high K+ about twofold only in the presence of external Ca2+ [( Ca2+]o). Phosphorylation of Mr 25,000 protein, on the other hand, was decreased up to 10-fold by high K+, irrespective of the level of [Ca2+]o. The effect of depolarization on Mr 25,000 protein phosphorylation most likely represents dephosphorylation rather than proteolysis. This interpretation is consistent with the observations that (a) reappearance of the Mr 25,000 protein occurred in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitors cycloheximide, puromycin, or anisomycin, and (b) the Hermissenda nervous system apparently contains a NaF- and EDTA-sensitive protein phosphatase capable of dephosphorylating Mr 25,000 protein. High K+ also reduced Mr 20,000 protein phosphorylation which was dependent on [Ca2+]o even in normal low K+ (10 mM) medium. Removal of [Ca2+]o enhanced reduction of Mr 20,000 phosphorylation due to the high K+ treatment. Interestingly, reduction of the Mr 25,000 protein phosphorylation was long-lasting, i.e., its phosphorylation did not fully recover to a control level for at least 30 min after the high K+ conditions had been removed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Calcium-mediated decrease of a voltage-dependent potassium current.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Elevated intracellular Ca++ concentration reduces the amplitude of an early, voltage-dependent K+ current (IA) in the Type B photoreceptor of Hermissenda crassicornis. Internal Ca++ is increased by activating a voltage and light-dependent Ca++ current present in these cells or by direct iontophoresis of Ca++ ions. Substitution of Ba++ for Ca++ or elimination of Ca++ from the sea water bathing the cells abolishes the reduction in IA during paired light and depolarizing voltage steps. The delayed K+ current (IB) in these cells is also reduced during paired light and voltage steps, but this decrease of IB is not affected by removal of extracellular Ca++. IB (but not IA), apparently much less dependent on intracellular Ca++ levels, is reduced by light alone. Ca++ iontophoresis also abolishes the light-dependent Na+ current, which recovers with a time course of minutes.  相似文献   

18.
The degranulation reactions of human neutrophils induced by 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol (OAG), phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), and calcium ionophore A23187 or their combinations, were studied. OAG in the absence of the Ca2+-ionophore A23187 stimulated the releases of both lysozyme and lactoferrin, constituents of the specific granules, but did not stimulate the release of beta-glucuronidase, an enzyme of the azurophil granules. Electron microscopy revealed a selective decrease in the numbers of the specific granules in this case. The combined effects of A23187 at a concentration higher than 0.1 microM and OAG were essentially additive. W-7, known to be an inhibitor of both Ca2+-activated phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (C-kinase) and calmodulin, inhibited the degranulation induced by OAG or PMA, while it inhibited the reaction induced by A23187 less markedly. The release of lysozyme reached a plateau at about 0.1 microM A23187 and increased again at higher concentrations of A23187. The observations suggest that degranulation can be induced by the activation of the C-kinase, and the degranulation by A23187 at low concentrations may be due to the activation of the C-kinase; the effects of A23187 at high concentrations, however, could not be explained only in terms of the activation of the C-kinase.  相似文献   

19.
The role of intracellular pH as a modulator of basolateral K+ and Cl- conductances in epithelial cells was studied using digitonin-permeabilized colonic cell layers so that cytosolic pH could be clamped at specific values, while basolateral K+ and Cl- conductances were activated by stepwise increases in intracellular free Ca2+. Increasing the intracellular pH from 6.6 to 8.0 enhanced the sensitivity of both ionic conductances to intracellular Ca2+, but changing extracellular pH had no effect. Maximal K+ and Cl- currents activated by Ca2+ were not affected by changes in intracellular pH, suggesting that protons do not alter the conduction properties of the channels. Hill analysis of the Ca2+ activation process revealed that raising the cytosolic pH from 6.6 to 8.0 reduced the K1/2 for Ca2+ activation. In the absence of Ca2+, changes in intracellular pH did not have a significant effect on the basolateral K+ and Cl- conductances. These results are consistent with the notion that changes in cytosolic pH can modulate basolateral conductances by modifying the action of calcium, perhaps by acting at or near the activation site to provide a mechanism of variable "gain control."  相似文献   

20.
Cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), a known endogenous modulator of ryanodine receptor Ca2+ releasing channels, is found in the nervous system. Injection of cADPR into neuronal cells primarily induces a transient elevation of intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), and/or secondarily potentiates [Ca2+]i increases that are the result of depolarization-induced Ca2+ influx. Acetylcholine release from cholinergic neurons is facilitated by cADPR. cADPR modifies K+ currents or elicits Ca2+-dependent inward currents. cADPR is synthesized by both membrane-bound and cytosolic forms of ADP-ribosyl cyclase in neuronal cells. cADPR hydrolase activity is weak in the membrane fraction, but high in the cytoplasm. Cytosolic ADP-ribosyl cyclase activity is upregulated by nitric oxide/cyclic GMP-dependent phosphorylation. Stimulation of muscarinic and beta-adrenergic receptors activates membrane-bound ADP-ribosyl cyclase via G proteins within membranes of neuronal tumor cells and cortical astrocytes. These findings strongly suggest that cADPR is a second messenger in Ca2+ signaling in the nervous system, although many intriguing issues remain to be addressed before this identity is confirmed.  相似文献   

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