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1.
The outcome of defibrillation shocks is determined by the nonlinear transmembrane potential (DeltaVm) response induced by a strong external electrical field in cardiac cells. We investigated the contribution of electroporation to DeltaVm transients during high-intensity shocks using optical mapping. Rectangular and ramp stimuli (10-20 ms) of different polarities and intensities were applied to the rabbit heart epicardium during the plateau phase of the action potential (AP). DeltaVm were optically recorded under a custom 6-mm-diameter electrode using a voltage-sensitive dye. A gradual increase of cathodal and well as anodal stimulus strength was associated with 1) saturation and subsequent reduction of DeltaVm; 2) postshock diastolic resting potential (RP) elevation; and 3) postshock AP amplitude (APA) reduction. Weak stimuli induced a monotonic DeltaVm response and did not affect the RP level. Strong shocks produced a nonmonotonic DeltaVm response and caused RP elevation and a reduction of postshock APA. The maximum positive and maximum negative DeltaVm were recorded at 170 +/- 20 mA/cm2 for cathodal stimuli and at 240 +/- 30 mA/cm2 for anodal stimuli, respectively (means +/- SE, n = 8, P = 0.003). RP elevation reached 10% of APA at a stimulus strength of 320 +/- 40 mA/cm2 for both polarities. Strong ramp stimuli (20 ms, 600 mA/cm2) induced a nonmonotonic DeltaVm response, reaching the same largest positive and negative values as for rectangular shocks. The transition from monotonic to nonmonotonic morphology correlates with RP elevation and APA reduction, which is consistent with cell membrane electroporation. Strong shocks resulted in propidium iodide uptake, suggesting sarcolemma electroporation. In conclusion, electroporation is a likely explanation of the saturation and nonmonotonic nature of cellular responses reported for strong electric stimuli.  相似文献   

2.
In cardiac muscle the amplitude of Ca(2+) transients can be increased by enhancing Ca(2+) influx. Among the processes leading to increased Ca(2+) influx, agonists of the L-type Ca(2+)-channel can play an important role. Known pharmacological Ca(2+)-channel agonists act on different binding sites on the channel protein, which may lead not only to enhanced peak currents, but also to distinct changes in other biophysical characteristics of the current. In this study, membrane currents were recorded with the patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration in guinea pig isolated ventricular myocytes in combination with confocal fluorescence Ca(2+) imaging techniques and a variety of pharmacological tools. Testing a new positive inotropic steroid-like compound, we found that it increased the L-type Ca(2+)-current by 2.5-fold by shifting the voltage-dependence of activation by 20.2 mV towards negative potentials. The dose-response relationship revealed two vastly different affinities (EC(50(high-affinity))=4.5+/-1.7 nM, EC(50(low-affinity))=8.0+/-1.1 microM) exhibiting differential pharmacological interactions with three classes of Ca(2+)-current antagonists, suggesting more than one binding site on the channel protein. Therefore, we identified and characterized a novel positive inotropic compound (F90927) as a member of a new class of Ca(2+)-channel agonists exhibiting unique features, which set it apart from other presently known L-type Ca(2+)-channel agonists.  相似文献   

3.
In this work, we propose a molecular model of the L-type calcium channel pore from the human cardiac alpha1 subunit. Four glutamic acid residues, the EEEE locus, located at highly conserved P loops (also called SS1-SS2 segments) of the alpha1 subunit, molecularly express the calcium channel selectivity. The proposed alpha-helix structure for the SS1 segment, analyzed through molecular dynamics simulations in aqueous-phase, was validated by the plotting of Ramachandran diagrams for the averaged structures and by the analysis of i and i + 4 helical hydrogen bonding between the amino acid residues. The results of the simulation of the calcium channel model with one and two Ca2+ ions at the binding site are in accordance with mutation studies which suggest that the EEEE locus in the L-type calcium channel must form a single high-affinity binding site. These results suggest that the Ca2+ permeation through the channel would be derived from competition between two ions for the only high-affinity binding site. Furthermore, the experimentally observed blocking of the Na+ flux at micromolar Ca2+ concentrations, probably due to the occupancy of the single high-affinity binding site for one Ca2+, was also reproduced by our model.  相似文献   

4.
We tested the hypothesis that increased Ca2+ uptake in rat extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle elicits cell membrane damage as assessed from release of the intracellular enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). This was done by using 1) electrostimulation, 2) electroporation, and 3) the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Stimulation at 1 Hz for 120-240 min caused an increase in 45Ca uptake that was closely correlated to LDH release. This LDH release increased markedly with temperature. After 120 min of stimulation at 1 Hz, resting 45Ca uptake was increased 5.6-fold compared with unstimulated muscles. This was associated with an eightfold increase in LDH release, and this effect was halved by lowering extracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]o). The poststimulatory increase in resting 45Ca uptake persisted for at least 120 min. An acute increase in sarcolemma leakiness induced by electroporation markedly increased 45Ca uptake and LDH leakage. Both effects depended on [Ca2+]o. A23187 increased 45Ca uptake. Concomitantly, LDH leakage increased 18-fold within 30 min, and this effect was abolished by omitting Ca2+ from the buffer. We conclude that increased Ca2+ influx may be an important cause of cell membrane damage that arises during and after exercise or electrical shocks. Because membrane damage allows further influx of Ca2+, this results in positive feedback that may further increase membrane degeneration.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of changes in membrane cholesterol on ion currents were investigated in pituitary GH3 cells. Depletion of membrane cholesterol by exposing cells to methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD), an oligosaccharide, resulted in an increase in the density of Ca2+-activated K+ current (IK(Ca)). However, no significant change in IK(Ca) density was demonstrated in GH3 cells treated with a mixture of MbetaCD and cholesterol. Cholesterol depletion with MbetaCD (1.5 mg/ml) slightly suppressed the density of voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ current. In inside-out patches recorded from MbetaCD-treated cells, the activity of large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK(Ca)) channels was enhanced with no change in single-channel conductance. In MbetaCD-treated cells, voltage-sensitivity of BK(Ca) channels was increased; however, no change in Ca2+-sensitivity could be demonstrated. A negative correlation between adjacent closed and open times in BK(Ca) channels was observed in MbetaCD-treated cells. In inside-out patches from MbetaCD-treated cells, dexamethasone (30 microM) applied to the intracellular surface did not increase BK(Ca)-channel activity, although caffeic acid phenethyl ester and cilostazol still opened its probability effectively. However, no modification in the activity of ATP-sensitive K+ channels could be seen in MbetaCD-treated cells. Current-clamp recordings demonstrated that the cholesterol depletion maneuver with MbetaCD reduced the firing of action potentials. Therefore, the increase in BK(Ca)-channel activity induced by membrane depletion may influence the functional activities of neurons or neuroendocrine cells if similar results occur in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
During secretion, membrane-bound secretory vesicles dock and fuse at the base of porosomes in the cell plasma membrane. Among other proteins, the porosome is composed of SNAREs and Ca2+-channels. Ca2+-channels and SNAREs have been implicated in cell secretion. Several immunoprecipitation and binding studies suggest the physical interaction of the t-SNARE proteins, Syntaxin-1 and SNAP-25 with various Ca2+-channels. In this study, using yeast two-hybrid and immunoanalysis, we demonstrate for the first time, direct interaction of SNAP-23 and a L-type Ca2+-channel at the plasma membrane in pancreas.  相似文献   

7.
We tested the hypothesis that the cellular mechanisms mediating hypoxic vasoconstriction (HVC) in frog skin, an important vertebrate respiratory organ, are similar to those mediating HVC in the pulmonary vasculature of mammals. An accepted hypothesis in the lung is that alveolar hypoxia alters the redox potential in vascular smooth muscle cells of arterial vessels. This decreases membrane K+ conductance, causing depolarization. Depolarization increases the open probability of L-type Ca2+ channels, facilitating Ca2+ entry into the cell, which leads to vascular smooth muscle contraction and vasoconstriction. We studied the cutaneous microcirculation of the frog (Xenopus laevis) web by enclosing the web in a transparent chamber that was ventilated with different gas mixtures. Arteriolar and venular diameters were measured by video microscopy. Drugs were applied topically or intravascularly. A dose-dependent constriction to hypoxia occurred in arterioles but not venules, although both vessel types constricted to similar degrees to the thromboxane mimetic U-46619. The magnitude of HVC was not associated with arteriolar size. Constriction of arterioles with 4-amino pyridine, a K+-channel antagonist, was blocked by the L-type Ca2+-channel blocker nifedipine. Nifedipine also antagonized HVC and hypercapnic vasoconstriction. Bay K 8664, a drug that increases the open probability of L-type Ca2+ channels, augmented HVC. These data support our hypothesis that the cellular mechanisms mediating HVC are similar in frog skin and mammalian lungs. This similarity between amphibian and mammalian tissues suggests that the mechanisms of HVC may have arisen relatively early in vertebrate evolution. In addition, because of its structural simplicity and easy accessibility, frog skin may be a useful tissue for studying this general phenomenon in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Ba2+ currents through L-type Ca2+ channels were recorded from cell- attached patches on mouse pancreatic beta cells. In 10 mM Ba2+, single- channel currents were recorded at -70 mV, the beta cell resting membrane potential. This suggests that Ca2+ influx at negative membrane potentials may contribute to the resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration and thus to basal insulin release. Increasing external Ba2+ increased the single-channel current amplitude and shifted the current-voltage relation to more positive potentials. This voltage shift could be modeled by assuming that divalent cations both screen and bind to surface charges located at the channel mouth. The single- channel conductance was related to the bulk Ba2+ concentration by a Langmuir isotherm with a dissociation constant (Kd(gamma)) of 5.5 mM and a maximum single-channel conductance (gamma max) of 22 pS. A closer fit to the data was obtained when the barium concentration at the membrane surface was used (Kd(gamma) = 200 mM and gamma max = 47 pS), which suggests that saturation of the concentration-conductance curve may be due to saturation of the surface Ba2+ concentration. Increasing external Ba2+ also shifted the voltage dependence of ensemble currents to positive potentials, consistent with Ba2+ screening and binding to membrane surface charge associated with gating. Ensemble currents recorded with 10 mM Ca2+ activated at more positive potentials than in 10 mM Ba2+, suggesting that external Ca2+ binds more tightly to membrane surface charge associated with gating. The perforated-patch technique was used to record whole-cell currents flowing through L-type Ca2+ channels. Inward currents in 10 mM Ba2+ had a similar voltage dependence to those recorded at a physiological Ca2+ concentration (2.6 mM). BAY-K 8644 (1 microM) increased the amplitude of the ensemble and whole-cell currents but did not alter their voltage dependence. Our results suggest that the high divalent cation solutions usually used to record single L-type Ca2+ channel activity produce a positive shift in the voltage dependence of activation (approximately 32 mV in 100 mM Ba2+).  相似文献   

9.
Planar lipid bilayer recordings were used to study Ca channels from bovine cardiac sarcolemmal membranes. Ca channel activity was recorded in the absence of nucleotides or soluble enzymes, over a range of membrane potentials and ionic conditions that cannot be achieved in intact cells. The dihydropyridine-sensitive L-type Ca channel, studied in the presence of Bay K 8644, was identified by a detailed comparison of its properties in artificial membranes and in intact cells. L-type Ca channels in bilayers showed voltage dependence of channel activation and inactivation, open and closed times, and single-channel conductances in Ba2+ and Ca2+ very similar to those found in cell-attached patch recordings. Open channels were blocked by micromolar concentrations of external Cd2+. In this cell-free system, channel activity tended to decrease during the course of an experiment, reminiscent of Ca2+ channel "rundown" in whole-cell and excised-patch recordings. A purely voltage-dependent component of inactivation was observed in the absence of Ca2+ stores or changes in intracellular Ca2+. Millimolar internal Ca2+ reduced unitary Ba2+ influx but did not greatly increase the rate or extent of inactivation or the rate of channel rundown. In symmetrical Ba2+ solutions, unitary conductance saturated as the Ba2+ concentration was increased up to 500 mM. The bilayer recordings also revealed activity of a novel Ca2+-permeable channel, termed "B-type" because it may contribute a steady background current at negative membrane potentials, which is distinct from L-type or T-type Ca channels previously reported. Unlike L-type channels, B-type channels have a small unitary Ba2+ conductance (7 pS), but do not discriminate between Ba2+ and Ca2+, show no obvious sensitivity to Bay K 8644, and do not run down. Unlike either L- or T-type channels, B-type channels did not require a depolarization for activation and displayed mean open times of greater than 100 ms.  相似文献   

10.
Sequence analysis of the human genome permitted cloning of five Ca(2+)-channel beta(2) splice variants (beta(2a)-beta(2e)) that differed only in their proximal amino-termini. The functional consequences of such beta(2)-subunit diversity were explored in recombinant L-type channels reconstituted in HEK 293 cells. Beta(2a) and beta(2e) targeted autonomously to the plasma membrane, whereas beta(2b)-beta(2d) localized to the cytosol when expressed in HEK 293 cells. The pattern of modulation of L-type channel voltage-dependent inactivation gating correlated with the subcellular localization of the component beta(2) variant-membrane-bound beta(2a) and beta(2e) subunits conferred slow(er) channel inactivation kinetics and displayed a smaller fraction of channels recovering from inactivation with fast kinetics, compared to beta(2b)-beta(2d) channels. The varying effects of beta(2) subunits on inactivation gating were accounted for by a quantitative model in which L-type channels reversibly distributed between fast and slow forms of voltage-dependent inactivation-membrane-bound beta(2) subunits substantially decreased the steady-state fraction of fast inactivating channels. Finally, the beta(2) variants also had distinctive effects on L-type channel steady-state activation gating, as revealed by differences in the waveforms of tail-activation (G-V) curves, and conferred differing degrees of prepulse facilitation to the channel. Our results predict important physiological consequences arising from subtle changes in Ca(2+)-channel beta(2)-subunit structure due to alternative splicing and emphasize the utility of splice variants in probing structure-function mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
L-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCCs) are enriched on the neuronal soma and trigger gene expression during synaptic activity. To understand better how these channels regulate somatic and nuclear Ca2+ dynamics, we have investigated Ca2+ influx through L-type VSCCs following synaptic stimulation, using the long-wavelength Ca2+ indicator fluo-3 combined with laser scanning confocal microscopy. Single synaptic stimuli resulted in rapid Ca2+ transients in somatic cytoplasmic compartments (<5 ms rise time). Nuclear Ca2+ elevations lagged behind cytoplasmic levels by approximately 60 ms, consistent with a dependence on diffusion from a cytoplasmic source. Pharmacological experiments indicated that L-type VSCCs mediated approximately 50% of the nuclear and somatic (cytoplasmic) Ca2+ elevation in response to strong synaptic stimulation. In contrast, relatively weak excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs; approximately 15 mV) or single action potentials were much less effective at activating L-type VSCCs. Antagonist experiments indicated that activation of the NMDA-type glutamate receptor leads to a long-lasting somatic depolarization necessary to activate L-type VSCCs effectively during synaptic stimuli. Simulation of action potential and somatic EPSP depolarization using voltage-clamp pulses indicated that nuclear Ca2+ transients mediated by L-type VSCCs were produced by sustained depolarization positive to -25 mV. In the absence of synaptic stimulation, action potential stimulation alone led to elevations in nuclear Ca2+ mediated by predominantly non-L-type VSCCs. Our results suggest that action potentials, in combination with long-lived synaptic depolarizations, facilitate the activation of L-type VSCCs. This activity elevates somatic Ca2+ levels that spread to the nucleus.  相似文献   

12.
This study expands a previously developed model of a single cell electroporated by an external electric field by explicitly accounting for the ionic composition of the electroporation current. The previous model with non-specific electroporation current predicts that both the transmembrane potential V(m) and the pore density N are symmetric about the equator, with the same values at either end of the cell. The new, ion-specific case predicts that V(m) is symmetric and almost identical to the profile from the non-specific case, but N has a profound asymmetry with the pore density at the hyperpolarized end of the cell twice the value at the depolarized end. These modeling results agree with the experimentally observed preferential uptake of marker molecules at the hyperpolarized end of the cell as reported in the literature. This study also investigates the changes in intracellular ionic concentrations induced around an electroporated single cell. For all ion species, the concentrations near the membrane vary significantly, which may explain the electrical disturbances observed experimentally after large electric shocks are delivered to excitable cells and tissues.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Pituitary corticotroph cells generate repetitive action potentials and associated Ca2+ transients in response to the agonist corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH). There is indirect evidence suggesting that the agonist, by way of complex intracellular mechanisms, modulates the voltage sensitivity of the L-type Ca2+ channels embedded in the plasma membrane. We have previously constructed a Hodgkin-Huxley-type model of this process, which indicated that an increase in the L-type Ca2+ current is sufficient to generate repetitive action potentials (LeBeau et al. (1997). Biophys. J.73, 1263-1275). CRH is also believed to inhibit an inwardly rectifying K+ current. In this paper, we have found that a CRH-induced inhibition of the inwardly rectifying K+ current increases the model action potential firing frequency, [Ca2+]i transients and membrane excitability. This dual modulatory action of CRH on inward rectifier and voltage-gated Ca2+ channels better describes the observed CRH-induced effects. This structural alteration to the model along with parameter changes bring the model firing frequency in line with experimental data. We also show that the model exhibits experimentally observed bursting behaviour, where the depolarization spike is followed by small oscillations in the membrane potential.  相似文献   

15.
An early cellular response of osteoblasts to swelling is plasma membrane depolarization, accompanied by a transient increase in intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i), which initiates regulatory volume decrease (RVD). The authors have previously demonstrated a hypotonically induced depolarization of the osteoblast plasma membrane, sufficient to open L-type Ca channels and mediate Ca2+ influx. Herein is described the initiation of RVD in UMR-106.01 cells, mediated by hypotonically induced [Ca2+]i transients resulting from the activation of specific isoforms of L-type Ca channels. The authors further demonstrate that substrate interaction determines which specific alpha1 Ca channel subunit isoform predominates and mediates Ca2+ entry and RVD. Swelling-induced [Ca2+]i transients, and RVD in cells grown on a type I collagen matrix, are inhibited by removal of Ca from extracellular solutions, dihydropyridines, and antisense oligodeoxynucleotides directed exclusively to the alpha1C isoform of the L-type Ca channel. Ca2+ transients and RVD in cells grown on untreated glass cover slips were inhibited by similar maneuvers, but only by antisense oligodeoxynucleotides directed to the alpha1S isoform of the L-type Ca channel. This represents the first molecular identification of the Ca channels that transduce the initiation signal for RVD by osteoblastic cells.  相似文献   

16.
The Ca2+ permeability of proteoliposomes containing Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum and its hydrophobic fragment was investigated, using the method of synthetic penetrant ions and the radioisotopic method. The former method was used to determine the diffusional membrane potential formed by Ca2+ concentration gradient. It was demonstrated that Ca2+-ATPase, whose active center is oriented outside, has and asymmetric conductivity, i. e., it facilitates the rapid efflux of Ca2+ from proteoliposomes. This efflux is stimulated by the membrane potential positive inside. The hydrophobic fragment of Ca2+-ATPase forms a Ca2+-channel with a high conductivity for Ca2+. This channel is responsible for the Ca2+ efflux from sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

17.
Studies on Ca2+-channel distribution in maturation arrested mouse oocyte   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The present study was carried out to identify the existence of voltage-dependent Ca2+-channels (P/Q-, N-, and L-type) and their distributional differences in germinal vesicle (GV) and GV breakdown (GVBD)-arrested mouse oocytes which includes GVBD to telophase I of meiosis I and matured oocytes (MII, metaphase of meiosis II) by using the immunocytochemical method and a confocal laser scanning microscope. (1) Comparison between follicular oocytes (GV) and GV-arrested oocytes after 17 hr of in vitro culture. In follicular oocytes, P/Q-, N-, L (anti-alpha1C anti-alpha1D)-type Ca2+-channels showed both localized and uniform staining. In contrast, GV-arrested oocytes, after in vitro culture for 17 hr, showed no presence of Ca2+-channels in most oocytes. (2) Comparison between GVBD oocytes after culture in vitro for 3 hr and GVBD-arrested oocytes after culture in vitro for 17 hr. In GVBD oocytes, P/Q-, N-, L (anti-1C, anti-alpha1D)-type Ca2+-channels showed both localized and uniform staining. In contrast, in GVBD-arrested oocytes, none of the three types of Ca2+-channels were identified in 72-86% of oocytes. The present study demonstrates that in most GVBD-arrested oocytes that do not mature to MII, there is no Ca2+-channel identified. Therefore, most of the GVBD-arrested oocytes seem to have defects in Ca2+-channel expression/translation. Also, distributional changes of Ca2+-channels take place depending on the maturation progress in GV oocytes and MII stage oocytes (ovulated and 17 hr cultured MII stage oocytes). In addition, we found evidence that a functional voltage-dependent Ca2+-channel (L-type) exists in mouse oocytes (ovulated and cultured MII staged oocytes by a confocal laser scanning microscope).  相似文献   

18.
P A Slesinger  J B Lansman 《Neuron》1991,7(5):755-762
Recordings of single-channel activity from cerebellar granule cells show that a component of Ca2+ entry flows through L-type Ca2+ channels that are closed at negative membrane potentials following a strong depolarization, but then open after a delay. The delayed openings can be explained if membrane depolarization drives Ca2+ channels into an inactivated state and some channels return to rest through the open state after repolarization. Whole-cell recordings show that the charge carried by Ca2+ during the tail increases as inactivation progresses, whereas the current during the voltage step decreases. Voltage-dependent inactivation may be a general mechanism in central neurons for enhancing Ca2+ entry by delaying it until after repolarization, when the driving force for ion entry is large. Modifying the rate and extent of inactivation would have large effects on Ca2+ entry through those channels that recover from inactivation by passing through the open state.  相似文献   

19.
C C Kuo  P Hess 《Neuron》1992,9(3):515-526
At extreme membrane potentials, the unitary inward and outward currents through L-type Ca2+ channels become diffusion controlled and saturate. The magnitudes of these currents indicate that the pore entrances are asymmetric, with the external mouth being much larger than the internal one. On the other hand, negative surface potentials at the two ends of the pore are rather similar. Both would be significant only when the ambient ionic strength is 110 mM or less. We conclude that the surface charges will not help much in concentrating the channel's favorite divalent cations in the physiological condition. However, the pore does possess an external mouth large enough to make the important inward Ca2+ flow not limited by diffusion, even with only 1 mM external Ca2+.  相似文献   

20.
Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is an important regulator of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) secretion from pituitary corticotroph cells. The intracellular signaling system that underlies this process involves modulation of voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channel activity, which leads to the generation of Ca2+ action potentials and influx of Ca2+. However, the mechanisms by which Ca2+ channel activity is modulated in corticotrophs are not currently known. We investigated this process in a Hodgkin-Huxley-type mathematical model of corticotroph plasma membrane electrical responses. We found that an increase in the L-type Ca2+ current was sufficient to generate action potentials from a previously resting state of the model. The increase in the L-type current could be elicited by either a shift in the voltage dependence of the current toward more negative potentials, or by an increase in the conductance of the current. Although either of these mechanisms is potentially responsible for the generation of action potentials, previous experimental evidence favors the former mechanism, with the magnitude of the shift required being consistent with the experimental findings. The model also shows that the T-type Ca2+ current plays a role in setting the excitability of the plasma membrane, but does not appear to contribute in a dynamic manner to action potential generation. Inhibition of a K+ conductance that is active at rest also affects the excitability of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

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