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1.
The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) was first identified in tissues involved in systemic Ca2+ homeostasis, where it acts to sense changes in circulating Ca2+. It has since been reported that the CaR is expressed in many tissues that are not associated with Ca2+ homeostasis, including the endocrine cells in pancreatic islets of Langerhans. In the present study we have used an insulin-secreting pancreatic beta-cell line (MIN6) to investigate the expression and function of CaR, using the calcimimetic A568, a CaR agonist that activates the CaR at physiological concentrations of extracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]o). Immunocytochemistry, Western blotting and RT-PCR confirmed the expression of CaR in MIN6 cells. CaR activation was associated with rapid and transient increases in [Ca2+]o, which were accompanied by the initiation of a marked but transient insulin secretory response. Stimulation of beta-cell secretory activity had no detectable effect on CaR mRNA levels, but CaR mRNA was markedly reduced by configuring MIN6 cells into islet- like structures. Our data are consistent with an important function for the beta-cell CaR in cell - cell communication within islets to co-ordinate insulin secretory responses.  相似文献   

2.
The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) belongs to class III of G-protein coupled receptors. The CaR is expressed at the surface of the parathyroid cells and plays an essential role in the regulation of Ca2+ homeostasis through the control of parathyroid secretion. The CaR is activated by Ca2+ and Mg2+ present in the extracellular fluids, various di- and trivalent cations, L-aminoacids and charged molecules including several antibiotics. Calcimimetics potentiate the effect of Ca2+ and are proposed to be of therapeutic benefit for the treatment of both primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Calcilytics block the Ca2+-induced activation of the CaR. Three-dimensional models of the seven transmembrane domains of the human CaR have been used to identify specific residues implicated in the recognition of calcimimetics and calcilytics. These molecules should be useful for delineating the physiological roles played by the CaR in several tissues and for clarifying the direct effects attributed to extracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
Riccardi D 《Cell calcium》1999,26(3-4):77-83
In mammals Ca2+ concentration in the extracellular fluids ([Ca2+]o) is essential for a number of vital processes varying from bone mineralization to blood coagulation, regulation of enzymatic processes, modulation of permeability and excitability of plasma membranes. For this reason [Ca2+]o is under strict control of a complex homeostatic system that includes parathyroid glands, kidneys, bones and intestine. The extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) is an essential component of this system, regulating parathyroid hormone secretion, calcium (and magnesium) excretion by the kidney, bone remodeling and Ca2+ reabsorption by the gastrointestinal tract. Structurally, the CaR is a novel member of a growing G protein-coupled receptor superfamily, which includes metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) [1], [gamma]-aminoisobutyric acid (GABA-B) receptors [2] and vomeronasal organ receptors [3]. Initially identified from bovine parathyroid glands [4], within the 5 years following its identification CaR presence has rapidly been identified as extending to organs where the link with mineral ion metabolism has not been elucidated (i.e. brain, stomach, eye, skin and many other epithelial cells) (see [5] for review). The role of the receptor in these regions is largely unknown, but it appears to be somewhat related to phenomena such as chemotaxis, cell proliferation and programmed cell death. This review will describe the discovery of a novel class of ion-sensing receptor(s), receptor-effector coupling and the roles of the CaR inside and outside the Ca2+o homeostatic system.  相似文献   

4.
Hira T  Nakajima S  Eto Y  Hara H 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(18):4620-4626
Intraluminal L-phenylalanine (Phe) stimulates cholecystokinin (CCK) secretion in vivo and in vitro. However, the cellular mechanism by which CCK-producing enteroendocrine cells sense Phe is unknown. The calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) can sense amino acids, and is expressed in the gastrointestinal tract. In the present study, we examined whether CaR functions as a receptor for Phe in CCK-producing enteroendocrine cells. CCK secretion and intracellular Ca2+ concentration in response to Phe were measured in the murine CCK-producing enteroendocrine cell line STC-1 at various extracellular Ca2+ concentrations or after treatment with a CaR antagonist. At more than 20 mm, Phe induced dose-dependent CCK secretion and intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in STC-1 cells. In the presence of 3.0 mm extracellular Ca2+, 10 and 20 mm Phe induced significantly higher CCK secretion than under normal conditions (1.2 mm extracellular Ca2+). Intracellular Ca2+ mobilization, induced by 10 or 20 mm Phe, was also enhanced by increasing extracellular Ca2+ concentrations. In addition, intracellular Ca2+ mobilization induced by addition of extracellular Ca2+ was augmented by the presence of Phe. These results closely match the known CaR properties. Treatment with a specific CaR antagonist (NPS2143) completely inhibited Phe-induced CCK secretion and the latter phase of intracellular Ca2+ mobilization. CaR mRNA expression was demonstrated by RT-PCR in STC-1 cells, as well as in other mouse tissues including the kidney, thyroid, stomach and intestine. In conclusion, CaR functions as a receptor for Phe, stimulating CCK secretion in enteroendocrine STC-1 cells.  相似文献   

5.
Termination of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) signaling via the extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) was visualized in single CaR-expressing human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells using ratiometric fluorescence resonance energy transfer-dependent cAMP sensors based on protein kinase A and Epac. Stimulation of CaR rapidly reversed or prevented agonist-stimulated elevation of cAMP through a dual mechanism involving pertussis toxin-sensitive Galpha(i) and the CaR-stimulated increase in intracellular [Ca2+]. In parallel measurements with fura-2, CaR activation elicited robust Ca2+ oscillations that increased in frequency in the presence of cAMP, eventually fusing into a sustained plateau. Considering the Ca2+ sensitivity of cAMP accumulation in these cells, lack of oscillations in [cAMP] during the initial phases of CaR stimulation was puzzling. Additional experiments showed that low-frequency, long-duration Ca2+ oscillations generated a dynamic staircase pattern in [cAMP], whereas higher frequency spiking had no effect. Our data suggest that the cAMP machinery in HEK cells acts as a low-pass filter disregarding the relatively rapid Ca2+ spiking stimulated by Ca(2+)-mobilizing agonists under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Rodland KD 《Cell calcium》2004,35(3):291-295
The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is a versatile sensor of small, polycationic molecules ranging from Ca2+ and Mg2+ through polyarginine, spermine, and neomycin. The sensitivity of the CaR to changes in extracellular Ca2+ over the range of 0.05-5 mM positions the CaR as a key mediator of cellular responses to physiologically relevant changes in extracellular Ca2+. For many cell types, including intestinal epithelial cells, breast epithelial cells, keratinocytes, and ovarian surface epithelial cells, changes in extracellular Ca2+ concentration over this range can switch the cellular behaviour from proliferation to terminal differentiation or quiescence. As cancer is predominantly a disease of disordered balance between proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis, disruptions in the function of the CaR could contribute to the progression of neoplastic disease. Loss of the growth suppressing effects of elevated extracellular Ca2+ have been demonstrated in parathyroid hyperplasias and in colon carcinoma, and have been correlated with changes in the level of CaR expression. Activation of the CaR has also been linked to increased expression and secretion of PTHrP (parathyroid hormone-related peptide), a primary causal factor in hypercalcemia of malignancy and a contributor to metastatic processes involving bone. Although mutation of the CaR does not appear to be an early event in carcinogenesis, loss or upregulation of normal CaR function can contribute to several aspects of neoplastic progression, so that therapeutic strategies directed at the CaR could potentially serve a supportive function in cancer management.  相似文献   

7.
We co-immunoprecipitated the Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) and type B gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor (GABA-B-R) from human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells expressing these receptors and from brain lysates where both receptors are present. CaRs extensively co-localized with the two subunits of the GABA-B-R (R1 and R2) in HEK-293 cell membranes and intracellular organelles. Coexpressing CaRs and GABA-B-R1s in HEK-293 cells suppressed the total cellular and cell surface expression of CaRs and inhibited phospholipase C activation in response to high extracellular [Ca(2+)] ([Ca(2+)](e)). In contrast, coexpressing CaRs and GABA-B-R2s enhanced CaR expression and signaling responses to raising [Ca(2+)](e). The latter effects of the GABA-B-R2 on the CaR were blunted by coexpressing the GABA-B-R1. Coexpressing the CaR with GABA-B-R1 or R2 enhanced the total cellular and cell surface expression of the GABA-B-R1 or R2, respectively. Studies with truncated CaRs indicated that the N-terminal extracellular domain of the CaR participated in the interaction of the CaR with the GABA-B-R1 and R2. In cultured mouse hippocampal neurons, CaRs co-localized with the GABA-B-R1 and R2. CaRs and GABA-B-R1s also co-immunoprecipitated from brain lysates. The expression of the CaR was increased in lysates from GABA-B-R1 knock-out mouse brains and in cultured hippocampal neurons with their GABA-B-R1 genes deleted in vitro. Thus, CaRs and GABA-B-R subunits can form heteromeric complexes in cells, and their interactions affect cell surface expression and signaling of CaR, which may contribute to extracellular Ca(2+)-dependent receptor activation in target tissues.  相似文献   

8.
The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is a multimodal sensor for several key nutrients, notably Ca2+ ions and L-amino acids, and is expressed abundantly throughout the gastrointestinal tract. While its role as a Ca2+ ion sensor is well recognized, its physiological significance as an L-amino acid sensor and thus, in the gastrointestinal tract, as a sensor of protein ingestion is only now coming to light. This review focuses on the CaR's amino acid sensing properties at both the molecular and cellular levels and considers new and putative physiological roles for the CaR in the amino acid-dependent regulation of gut hormone secretion, epithelial transport, and satiety.  相似文献   

9.
The cloning of a G protein-coupled, extracellular Ca2+ (Ca o 2+ )-sensing receptor (CaR) has afforded a molecular basis for a number of the known effects of Ca o 2+ on tissues involved in maintaining systemic calcium homeostasis, especially parathyroid gland and kidney. In addition to providing molecular tools for showing that CaR messenger RNA and protein are present within these tissues, the cloned CaR has permitted documentation that several human diseases are the result of inactivating or activating mutations of this receptor as well as generation of mice that have targeted disruption of the CaR gene. Characteristic changes in the functions of parathyroid and kidney in these patients as well as in the CaR “knockout” mice have elucidated considerably the CaR’s physiological roles in mineral ion homeostasis. Nevertheless, a great deal remains to be learned about how this receptor regulates the functioning of other tissues involved in Ca o 2+ metabolism, such as bone and intestine. Further study of these human diseases and of the mouse models will doubtless be useful in gaining additional understanding of the CaR’s roles in these latter tissues. Furthermore, we understand little of the CaR’s functions in tissues that are not directly involved in systemic mineral ion metabolism, where the receptor probably serves diverse other roles. Some of these functions may be related to the control of intra- and local extracellular concentrations of Ca2+, while others may be unrelated to either systemic or local ionic homeostasis. In any case, the CaR and conceivably additional receptors/sensors for Ca2+ or other extracellular ions represent versatile regulators of a wide variety of cellular functions and represent important targets for novel classes of therapeutics.  相似文献   

10.
In multicellular organisms, cells are crowded together in organized communities, surrounded by an interstitial fluid of extremely limited volume. Local communication between adjacent cells is known to occur through gap junctions in cells that are physically connected, or through the release of paracrine signaling molecules (e.g. ATP, glutamate, nitric oxide) that diffuse to their target receptors through the extracellular microenvironment. Recent evidence hints that calcium ions may possibly be added to the list of paracrine messengers that allow cells to communicate with one another. Local fluctuations in extracellular [Ca2+] can be generated as a consequence of intracellular Ca2+ signaling events, owing to the activation of Ca2+ influx and efflux pathways at the plasma membrane. In intact tissues, where the interstitial volumes between cells are much smaller than the cells themselves, this can result in significant alterations in external [Ca2+]. This article will explore emerging evidence that these extracellular [Ca2+] changes can be detected by the extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) on adjacent cells, forming the basis for a paracrine signaling system. Such a mechanism could potentially provide CaR-expressing cells with the means to sense the Ca2+ signaling status of their neighbors, and expand the utility of the intracellular Ca2+ signal to a domain outside the cell.  相似文献   

11.
Ca2+ as an extracellular signal in bone   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Dvorak MM  Riccardi D 《Cell calcium》2004,35(3):249-255
Bone is the major sink and store for calcium and it fulfils essential roles in the maintenance of extracellular free ionised calcium concentration ([Ca2+]e) within its homeostatic range (1.1-1.3 mM). In response to acute hypercalcaemia or hypocalcaemia, Ca2+ is rapidly transported into or out of bone. Bone turnover (and therefore bone Ca2+ turnover) achieves the long-term correction of the [Ca2+]e by the metabolic actions of osteoblasts and osteoclasts, as they respectively incorporate or release Ca2+ from bone. These processes are regulated by the actions of hormones, such as parathyroid hormone (PTH), the release of which is a function of the [Ca2+]e, and is regulated by the action of the Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaR) in the parathyroid gland. Tissue culture studies indicate that bone cells also directly respond to increasing and decreasing [Ca2+]e in their vicinity, independently of the systemic factors. Nevertheless, further studies are necessary to identify how the acute and long-term local changes in [Ca2+]e affect bone cells and the physiological processes they are involved in. Also, the molecular mechanisms which enable the bone cells to sense and respond to [Ca2+]e are not clear. Like the parathyroid cells, bone cells also express the CaR, and accumulating evidence indicates the involvement of this receptor in their responses to the changing extracellular ionic environment.  相似文献   

12.
Mihai R  Lai T  Schofield G  Farndon JR 《Cell calcium》1999,26(3-4):95-101
Parathyroid cells express a plasma membrane calcium receptor (CaR), which is stimulated by a rise in extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]ext). A decreased sensitivity to [Ca2+]ext occurs in adenomatous parathyroid cells in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, but the underlying functional mechanism is not yet fully understood. This study explored whether CaR responsiveness is influenced by increasing the affinity of IP3 receptors--a major signalling component of other G-protein-coupled receptors. The sulphydryl reagent thimerosal was used to increase the responsiveness of IP3-receptors. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy in Fura-2-loaded cells was used to investigate the effects of thimerosal on the cytoplasmic calcium concentrations ([Ca2+]i) in human parathyroid cells and to compare its effects in a rat medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line (rMTC6-23) also expressing CaR. During incubation in Ca(2+)-free medium, thimerosal 5 microM induced a rapid sustained rise in [Ca2+]i in human parathyroid cells and no further [Ca2+]i increase appeared in response to the CaR agonist Gd3+ (100 microM). Thimerosal 1 microM induced only slow and minimal changes of basal [Ca2+]i and allowed a rapid response to Gd3+ 20 nM (a concentration without effect in control cells). The slope of the thimerosal-induced [Ca2+]i responses was steeper following exposure to CaR agonists. In the presence of 1 mM [Ca2+]ext, thimerosal (0.5 microM) induced a sharp increase in [Ca2+]i to a peak (within 60 s), followed either by return to basal [Ca2+]i or by a plateau of slightly higher amplitude. Similar results were obtained using rMTC6-23 cells. Thimerosal increases the responsiveness to CaR agonists through modulation of the sensitivity of the IP3 receptor in both parathyroid and rMTC6-23 cells.  相似文献   

13.
The skeletal matrix in terrestrial vertebrates undergoes continual cycles of removal and replacement in the processes of bone growth, repair and remodeling. The osteoclast is uniquely important in bone resorption and thus is implicated in the pathogenesis of clinically important bone and joint diseases. Activated osteoclasts form a resorptive hemivacuole with the bone surface into which they release both acid and osteoclastic lysosomal hydrolases. This article reviews cell physiological studies of the local mechanisms that regulate the resorptive process. These used in vitro methods for the isolation, culture and direct study of the properties of neonatal rat osteoclasts. They demonstrated that both local microvascular agents and products of the bone resorptive process such as ambient Ca2+ could complement longer-range systemic regulatory mechanisms such as those that might be exerted through calcitonin (CT). Thus elevated extracellular [Ca2+], or applications of surrogate divalent cation agonists for Ca2+, inhibited bone resorptive activity and produced parallel increases in cytosolic [Ca2+], cell retraction and longer-term inhibition of enzyme release in isolated rat osteoclasts. These changes showed specificity, inactivation, and voltage-dependent properties that implicated a cell surface Ca2+ receptor (CaR) sensitive to millimolar extracellular [Ca2+]. Pharmacological, biophysical and immunochemical evidence implicated a ryanodine-receptor (RyR) type II isoform in this process and localized it to a unique, surface membrane site, with an outward-facing channel-forming domain. Such a surface RyR might function either directly or indirectly in the process of extracellular [Ca2+] sensing and in turn be modulated by cyclic adenosine diphosphate ribose (cADPr) produced by the ADP-ribosyl cyclase, CD38. The review finishes by speculating about possible detailed models for these transduction events and their possible interactions with other systemic mechanisms involved in Ca2+ homeostasis as well as the possible role of the RyR-based signaling mechanisms in longer-term cell regulatory processes.  相似文献   

14.
The calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is activated by small changes in the ionic extracellular calcium concentration (Ca(o)) within the physiological range, allowing the parathyroid gland to regulate serum Ca(o); however, the CaR is also distributed in a number of other tissues where it may sense other endogenous agonists and modulators. CaR agonists are polycationic molecules, and our previous studies suggest that charged residues in the extracellular domain of the CaR are critical for receptor activation through electrostatic interactions. Therefore, pH could also potentially modulate CaR activation by its polycationic agonists. Changes in the concentration of extracellular H(+) substantially altered the activation of the CaR by Ca(o) and other CaR agonists. The effects of external pH on the CaR's sensitivity to its agonists were observed for both acidic and basic deviations from physiological pH of 7.4, with increases in pH rendering the receptor more sensitive to activation by Ca(o) and decreases in pH producing the converse effect. At pH values more acidic than 5.5, CaR sensitivity to its agonists showed some recovery. Changes in the intracellular pH could not account for the effects of external pH on CaR sensitivity to its agonists. Other G-protein-coupled receptors, which are endogenously expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, showed little change in activity with alterations in external pH or effects opposite those found for the CaR. Extracellular pH directly alters the CaR in the case of Ca(o) and Mg(o) activation; however, the charges on many organic and inorganic agonists are pH-dependent. Activating CaR mutations show reduced pH(o) modulation, suggesting a molecular mechanism for increased CaR activity at physiological pH(o). Several CaR-expressing tissues, including regions of the stomach, the kidney, bone, and the brain, could potentially use the CaR as a sensor for pH and acid-base status.  相似文献   

15.
Chang W  Shoback D 《Cell calcium》2004,35(3):183-196
Extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptors (CaRs) are the molecular basis by which specialized cells detect and respond to changes in the extracellular [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]o). CaRs belong to the family C of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). Activation of CaRs triggers signaling pathways that modify numerous cell functions. Multiple ligands regulate the activation of CaRs including multivalent cations, L-amino acids, and changes in ionic strength and pH. CaRs in parathyroid cells play a central role in systemic Ca2+ homeostasis in terrestrial tetrapods. Mutations of the CaR gene in humans cause diseases in which serum and urine [Ca2+] and parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels are altered. CaR homologues are also expressed in organs critical to Ca2+ transport in ancient and modern fish, suggesting that similar receptors may have long been involved in Ca2+ homeostasis in lower vertebrates before parathyroid glands developed in terrestrial vertebrates. CaR mRNA and protein are also expressed in tissues not directly involved in Ca2+ homeostasis. This implies that there may be other biological roles for CaRs. Studies of CaR-knockout mice confirm the importance of CaRs in the parathyroid gland and kidney. The functions of CaRs in tissues other than kidney and parathyroid gland, however, remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

16.
Wang ZH  Hu QH  Zhong H  Deng FM  He F 《生理学报》2011,63(1):39-47
为了探讨小凹蛋白-1(caveolin-1,Cav-1)在人脐静脉内皮细胞(human umbilical vein endothelial cells,HUVECs)细胞外钙敏感受体(extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptor,CaR)介导Ca2+内流中的作用,本实验研究了细胞膜穴样凹陷(caveolae)结构破坏剂Filipin或Cav-1基因沉默后对CaR介导Ca2+内流的影响。Fura-2/AM负载检测细胞内Ca2+浓度(intracellular Ca2+ concentration,[Ca2+]i)。结果显示,HUVECs中CaR对不同浓度细胞外Ca2+刺激无反应。无论细胞外为零钙液或含钙液时,精胺(Spermine,2mmol/L)刺激CaR时均引起[Ca2+]i升高(P<0.05),其中细胞外液为含钙液时,[Ca2+]i升高较细胞外为零钙液时更明显(P<0.05),CaR的负性变构调节剂Calhex231(1μmol/L)均可完全阻断Spermine刺激引起的[Ca2+]i升高(P<0.05);相反,Spermine升高[Ca2+]i作用可被Filipin(1.5μ...  相似文献   

17.
The extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor is activated allosterically by l-amino acids, and recent molecular analysis indicates that amino acids are likely to bind in the receptor's Venus flytrap domain. In the current study we set out to identify residues in the VFT domain that specifically support amino acid binding and/or amino acid-dependent receptor activation. Herein we describe two mutations of the Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) Venus Flytrap domain, T145A and S170T, that specifically impair amino acid sensing, leaving Ca2+ sensing intact, as determined by receptor-dependent activation of intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in fura-2-loaded HEK293 cells. With respect to the wild-type CaR, T145A and S170T exhibited reduced sensitivity to l-Phe, and T145A also exhibited markedly impaired l/d selectivity. When combined, the double mutant T145A/S170T exhibited normal or near-normal sensitivity to extracellular Ca2+ but was resistant to l-Phe at concentrations up to 100 mm. We conclude that T145A/S170T selectively disables l-amino acid sensing and that the Ca2+ and l-amino acid-sensing functions of the CaR can be dissociated.  相似文献   

18.
胞外Ca2+信号——动植物中的第一信使   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
赵昕  裴真明  何奕昆 《遗传》2007,29(3):269-275
钙离子作为重要的胞内第二信使, 控制着许多细胞的功能, 人们对此已经研究得比较深入。然而最近发现的一些细胞表面胞外Ca2+探测器使我们想到是否在胞外环境中, 钙离子也具有信号分子的功能。钙离子传感器包括已经研究得比较清楚的胞外Ca2+敏感受体—最初从甲状旁腺分离的G-耦联蛋白受体(CaR), 另外, 还有其他受体、通道和膜蛋白也都对胞外[Ca2+]的变化很敏感。最近从拟南芥保卫细胞中克隆到一个胞外钙离子受体蛋白(CAS), 通过胞外钙离子的变化引起胞内钙离子信号。这些受体蛋白的克隆, 使人们确信Ca2+在细胞中可以发挥第一信使的功能。  相似文献   

19.
20.
In cultured keratinocytes, the acute increase of the extracellular calcium concentration above 0.03 mM leads to a rapid increase in intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)]i) and inositol trisphosphate production and, subsequently, to the expression of differentiation-related genes. Previous studies demonstrated that human keratinocytes express the full-length extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) and an alternatively spliced variant lacking exon 5 and suggested their involvement in calcium regulation of keratinocyte differentiation. To understand the role of the CaR, we transfected keratinocytes with an antisense human CaR cDNA construct and examined its impact on calcium signaling and calcium-induced differentiation. The antisense CaR cDNA significantly reduced the protein level of endogenous CaRs. These cells displayed a marked reduction in the rise in [Ca(2+)]i in response to extracellular calcium or to NPS R-467, a CaR activator, whereas the ATP-evoked rise in [Ca(2+)]i was not affected. Calcium-induced inhibition of cell proliferation and calcium-stimulated expression of the differentiation markers involucrin and transglutaminase were also blocked by the antisense CaR cDNA. When cotransfected with luciferase reporter vectors containing either the involucrin or transglutaminase promoter, the antisense CaR cDNA suppressed the calcium-stimulated promoter activities. These results indicate that CaR is required for mediating calcium signaling and calcium-induced differentiation in keratinocytes.  相似文献   

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