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1.
Intracellular Ca2+ pools play an important role in the adjustment of cytosolic free Ca2+ concentrations. This review summarizes the recent knowledge on receptor-mediated Ca2+ release and Ca2+ uptake mechanisms in Ca2+ stores of exocrine cells taking the exocrine pancreas and the parotid gland as an example. The intracellular mediator for agonist-induced Ca2+ release is inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) which acts by opening Ca2+ channels from the endoplasmic reticulum or a more specialized organelle called 'calciosome'. This Ca2+ release is the major event to increase cytosolic free Ca2+ concentrations of exocrine glands from a resting level of approximately 10(-7) mol/l to approximately 10(-6) mol/l. Subsequently also Ca2+ influx from the extracellular fluid into the cell is increased which involves the action of inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate (IP4). Intracellular nonmitochondrial Ca2+ reuptake occurs into IP3-sensitive (IsCaP) as well as into IP3-insensitive Ca2+ pools Ca2+ pools (IisCaP). While Ca2+ uptake into the IisCaP is mediated by a vanadate-sensitive Ca2+ pump, Ca2+ uptake into the IsCaP is mediated by a Ca2+/H+ exchanger at the expense of an H+ gradient which is established by a vacuolar type H+ pump present in the same Ca2+ pool. During stimulation both Ca2+ pools, IsCaP and IisCaP, are probably connected, the nature of which has not yet been clarified. It is suggested that GTP and/or IP4 control Ca2+ conveyance between intracellular Ca2+ pools by forming Ca2+-carrying junctions between membranes. Other models propose that Ca2+, which is released by IP3, induces Ca2+ release from another Ca2+ pool. Taking into account that H+ transport is present in IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pools the possibility of pH-regulated Ca2+ channels in the IisCaP, located in close neighbourhood to the IsCaP, is also considered.  相似文献   

2.
The movement of tropomyosin from actin's outer to its inner domain plays a key role in sterically regulating muscle contraction. This movement, from a low Ca2+ to a Ca2+-induced position has been directly demonstrated by electron microscopy and helical reconstruction. Solution studies, however, suggest that tropomyosin oscillates dynamically between these positions at all Ca2+ levels, and that it is the position of this equilibrium that is controlled by Ca2+. Helical reconstruction reveals only the average position of tropomyosin on the filament, and not information on the local dynamics of tropomyosin in any one Ca2+ state. We have therefore used single particle analysis to analyze short filament segments to reveal local variations in tropomyosin behavior. Segments of Ca2+-free and Ca2+ treated thin filaments were sorted by cross-correlation to low and high Ca2+ models of the thin filament. Most segments from each data set produced reconstructions matching those previously obtained by helical reconstruction, showing low and high Ca2+ tropomyosin positions for low and high Ca2+ filaments. However, approximately 20% of segments from Ca2+-free filaments fitted best to the high Ca2+ model, yielding a corresponding high Ca2+ reconstruction. Conversely, approximately 20% of segments from Ca2+-treated filaments fitted best to the low Ca2+ model and produced a low Ca2+ reconstruction. Hence, tropomyosin position on actin is not fixed in either Ca2+ state. These findings provide direct structural evidence for the equilibration of tropomyosin position in both high and low Ca2+ states, and for the concept that Ca2+ controls the position of this equilibrium. This flexibility in the localization of tropomyosin may provide a means of sterically regulating contraction at low energy cost.  相似文献   

3.
N. Kraus-Friedmann   《Cell calcium》1990,11(10):625-640
Hepatic parenchymal cells maintain intracellular total and cytosolic free Ca2+ levels by: entry of Ca2+ through channels, extrusion of Ca2+ by an outwardly directed Ca2+ pump, and controlled sequestration into intracellular pools. The mechanism of Ca2+ inflow is poorly characterized. The plasma membrane Ca2+ channels seem to share some of the characteristics of Ca2+ channels in excitable cells, but also differ from them. The outwardly directed plasma membrane Ca2(+)-ATPase is a calmodulin independent, P-type enzyme. Ca2+ uptake into the endoplasmic reticulum is due to the activity of a different Ca2(+)-ATPase, which is similar in molecular weight and shares antigenic determinants with the sarcoplasmic reticulum enzyme. In addition, mitochondria and nuclei also take up calcium. The exact mechanism by which Ca2+ is released from intracellular organelles is not well known. Several mechanisms for Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum were reported, including IP3 and GTP-induced. The most effective identified way of eliciting Ca2+ release from microsomal fraction is by the oxidation of critical -SH groups. This mechanism is likely to be involved in the rise of cytosolic Ca2+ observed in many situations of hepatocellular injury. In addition to being sequestered into subcellular organelles, some of the intracellular Ca2+ is bound to specific Ca2+ binding proteins. Both calmodulin and members of the annexin family were identified in the liver. Stimulation of the liver with gluconeogenic hormones results in increased Ca2+ entry into the cell, the release of Ca2+ from intracellular pools, and an oscillatory increase in free cytosolic Ca2+ levels. Extensive research is still needed for the elucidation of the exact mechanisms by which these events occur.  相似文献   

4.
Contraction of cardiac myocytes is governed by calcium-ion (Ca2+ )-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum through Ca2+-release channels. Ca2+ release occurs by concerted activation of numerous elementary Ca2+ events, 'Ca2+ sparks', that are triggered and locally controlled by Ca2+ influx into the cell through plasmalemmal L-type Ca2+ channels. Because of the positive feedback inherent in CICR, an as-yet-unidentified control mechanism is required to restrain the amplification of Ca2+ signalling and to terminate Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Here we use ultraviolet-laser-flash and two-photon photolysis of caged Ca2+ to study spatiotemporal features of the termination and refractoriness of Ca2+ release. Coherent and simultaneous activation of all Ca2+-release sites within a cardiac myocyte unmasked a prominent refractoriness, recovering monotonically within about 1 second. In contrast, selective activation of a few Ca 2+-release sites was not followed by a refractoriness of Ca 2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. This discrepancy is consistent with the idea that a functional depletion of Ca2+ from the cellular sarcoplasmic-reticulum network may underlie the refractoriness of CICR observed after a whole-cell Ca2+ transient. These results also imply the requirement for further mechanisms to terminate spatially limited subcellular Ca2+-release events such as Ca2+ sparks.  相似文献   

5.
Media prepared with CDTA and low concentrations of Ca2+, as judged by the lack of Na+-dependent phosphorylation and ATPase activity of (Na+ +K+)-ATPase preparations are free of contaminant Mg2+. In these media, the Ca2+-ATPase from human red cell membranes is phosphorylated by ATP, and a low Ca2+-ATPase activity is present. In the absence of Mg2+ the rate of phosphorylation in the presence of 1 microM Ca2+ is very low but it approaches the rate measured in Mg2+-containing media if the concentration of Ca2+ is increased to 5 mM. The KCa for phosphorylation is 2 microM in the presence and 60 microM in the absence of Mg2+. Results are consistent with the idea that for catalysis of phosphorylation the Ca2+-ATPase needs Ca2+ at the transport site and Mg2+ at an activating site and that Ca2+ replaces Mg2+ at this site. Under conditions in which it increases the rate of phosphorylation, Ca2+ is without effect on the Ca2+-ATPase activity in the absence of Mg2+ suggesting that to stimulate ATP hydrolysis Mg2+ accelerates a reaction other than phosphorylation. Activation of the E1P----E2P reaction by Mg2+ is prevented by Ca2+ after but not before the synthesis of E1P from E1 and ATP, suggesting that Mg2+ stabilizes E1 in a state from which Mg2+ cannot be removed by Ca2+ and that Ca2+ stabilizes E1P in a state insensitive to Mg2+. The response of the Ca2+-ATPase activity to Mg2+ concentration is biphasic, activation with a KMg = 88 microM is followed by inhibition with a Ki = 9.2 mM. Ca2+ at concentration up to 1 mM acts as a dead-end inhibitor of the activation by Mg2+, and Mg2+ at concentrations up to 0.5 mM acts as a dead-end inhibitor of the effects of Ca2+ at the transport site of the Ca2+-ATPase.  相似文献   

6.
Although L-type Ca2+ channels have been shown to play a central role in cardiac excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling, little is known about the role of T-type Ca2+ channels in this process. We used the amphotericin B perforated patch method to study the possible role of T-type Ca2+ current in E-C coupling in isolated canine Purkinje myocytes where both Ca2+ currents are large. T-type Ca2+ current was separated from L-type Ca2+ current using protocols employing the different voltage dependencies of the channel types and their different sensitivities to pharmacological blockade. We showed that Ca2+ admitted through either T- or L-type Ca2+ channels is capable of initiating contraction and that the contractions depended on Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). The contractions, however, had different properties. Those initiated by Ca2+ entry through T-type Ca2+ channels had a longer delay to the onset of shortening, slower rates of shortening and relaxation, lower peak shortening, and longer time to peak shortening. These differences were present even when L-type Ca2+ current amplitude, or charge entry, was less than that of T-type Ca2+ current, suggesting that Ca2+ entry through the T-type Ca2+ channel is a less effective signal transduction mechanism to the SR than is Ca2+ entry through the L-type Ca2+ channel. We conclude that under our experimental conditions in cardiac Purkinje cells Ca2+ entry through the T-type Ca2+ channel can activate cell contraction. However, Ca2+ entry through the L-type Ca2+ channel is a more effective signal transduction mechanism. Our findings support the concept that different structural relationships exist between these channel types and the SR Ca2+ release mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Oscillation in [Ca2+]i induced by agonists has been described in many cell types and is thought to reflect Ca2+ release from and uptake into internal stores. We measured [Ca2+]i and Mn2+ entry in single cells of the pancreatic acinar cell line AR42J loaded with Fura 2 to examine the behavior of Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane (Ca2+ entry) during agonist-evoked [Ca2+]i oscillation. Addition of extracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+out) to agonist-stimulated cells bathed in Ca2(+)-free medium resulted in a marked [Ca2+]i increase blocked by La3+. The use of Mn2+ as a congener of Ca2+ to follow unidirectional Ca2+ movement reveals an oscillatory activation of Ca2+ entry by Ca2(+)-mobilizing agonists. The frequency at which Ca2+ entry oscillated matched the frequency of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores. Ca2+ entry is activated after completion of Ca2+ release and is inactivated within the time span of each [Ca2+]i spike. These studies reveal a new aspect of [Ca2+]i oscillation in agonist-stimulated cells, that is the oscillatory activation of [Ca2+]i entry during [Ca2+]i oscillation.  相似文献   

8.
We investigated the effect of cytosolic and extracellular Ca2+ on Ca2+ signals in pancreatic acinar cells by measuring Ca2+ concentration in the cytosol([Ca2+]c) and in the lumen of the ER([Ca2+]Lu). To control buffers and dye in the cytosol, a patch-clamp microelectrode was employed. Acetylcholine released Ca2+ mainly from the basolateral ER-rich part of the cell. The rate of Ca2+ release from the ER was highly sensitive to the buffering of [Ca2+]c whereas ER Ca2+ refilling was enhanced by supplying free Ca2+ to the cytosol with [Ca2+]c clamped at resting levels with a patch pipette containing 10 mM BAPTA and 2 mM Ca2+. Elevation of extracellular Ca2+ to 10 mM from 1 mM raised resting [Ca2+]c slightly and often generated [Ca2+]c oscillations in single or clustered cells. Although pancreatic acinar cells are reported to have extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptors linked to phospholipase C that mobilize Ca2+ from the ER, exposure of cells to 10 mM Ca2+ did not decrease [Ca2+]Lu but rather raised it. From these findings we conclude that 1) ER Ca2+ release is strictly regulated by feedback inhibition of [Ca2+]c, 2) ER Ca2+ refilling is determined by the rate of Ca2+ influx and occurs mainly in the tiny subplasmalemmal spaces, 3) extracellular Ca2+-induced [Ca2+]c oscillations appear to be triggered not by activation of extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptors but by the ER sensitised by elevated [Ca2+]c and [Ca2+]Lu.  相似文献   

9.
Activation of a wide variety of membrane receptors leads to a sustained elevation of intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) that is pivotal to subsequent cell responses. In general, in nonexcitable cells this elevation of [Ca2+]i results from two sources: an initial release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores followed by an influx of extracellular Ca2+. These two phases, release from intracellular stores and Ca2+ influx, are generally coupled: stimulation of influx is coordinated with depletion of Ca2+ from stores, although the mechanism of coupling is unclear. We have previously shown that histamine effects a typical [Ca2+]i response in interphase HeLa cells: a rapid rise in [Ca2+]i followed by a sustained elevation, the latter dependent entirely on extracellular Ca2+. In mitotic cells only the initial elevation, derived by Ca2+ release from intracellular stores, occurs. Thus, in mitotic cells the coupling of stores to influx may be specifically broken. In this report we first provide additional evidence that histamine-stimulated Ca2+ influx is strongly inhibited in mitotic cells. We show that efflux is also strongly stimulated by histamine in interphase cells but not in mitotics. It is possible, thus, that in mitotics intracellular stores are only very briefly depleted of Ca2+, being replenished by reuptake of Ca2+ that is retained within the cell. To ensure the depletion of Ca2+ stores in mitotic cells, we employed the sesquiterpenelactone, thapsigargin, that is known to affect the selective release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores by inhibition of a specific Ca(2+)-ATPase; reuptake is inhibited. In most cells, and in accord with Putney's capacitative model (1990), thapsigargin, presumably by depleting intracellular Ca2+ stores, stimulates Ca2+ influx. This is the case for interphase HeLa cells. Thapsigargin induces an increase in [Ca2+]i that is dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and is associated with a strong stimulation of 45Ca2+ influx. In mitotic cells thapsigargin also induces a [Ca2+]i elevation that is initially comparable in magnitude and largely independent of extracellular Ca2+. However, unlike interphase cells, in mitotic cells the elevation of [Ca2+]i is not sustained and 45Ca2+ influx is not stimulated by thapsigargin. Thus, the coupling between depletion of intracellular stores and Ca2+ influx is specifically broken in mitotic cells. Uncoupling could account for the failure of histamine to stimulate Ca2+ influx during mitosis and would effectively block all stimuli whose effects are mediated by Ca2+ influx and sustained elevations of [Ca2+]i.  相似文献   

10.
ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake by subfractions of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) was studied with the Ca2+ indicator dye, antipyrylazo III. Ca2+ uptake by heavy SR showed two phases, a slow uptake phase and a fast uptake phase. By contrast, Ca2+ uptake by light SR exhibited a monophasic time course. In both fractions a steady state of Ca2+ uptake was observed when the concentration of free Ca2+ outside the vesicles was reduced to less than 0.1 microM. In the steady state, the addition of 5 microM Ca2+ to the external medium triggered rapid Ca2+ release from heavy SR but not from light SR, indicating that the heavy fraction contains a Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release channel. During Ca2+ uptake, heavy SR showed a constant Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity (1 mumol/mg protein X min) which was about 150 times higher than the rate of Ca2+ uptake in the slow uptake phase. Ruthenium red, an inhibitor of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release, enhanced the rate of Ca2+ uptake during the slow phase without affecting Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity. Adenine nucleotides, activators of Ca2+ release, reduced the Ca2+ uptake rate. These results suggest that the rate of Ca2+ accumulation by heavy SR is not proportional to ATPase activity during the slow uptake phase due to the activation of the channel for Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release. In addition, they suggest that the release channel is inactivated during the fast Ca2+ uptake phase.  相似文献   

11.
Calcium (Ca2+) is a universal signalling molecule involved in many aspects of cellular function. The majority of intracellular Ca2+ is stored in the endoplasmic reticulum and once Ca2+ is released from the endoplasmic reticulum, specific plasma membrane Ca2+ channels are activated, resulting in increased intracellular Ca2+. In the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, Ca2+ is buffered by Ca2+ binding chaperones such as calreticulin. Calreticulin-deficiency is lethal in utero due to impaired cardiac development and in the absence of calreticulin, Ca2+ storage capacity within the endoplasmic reticulum and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor mediated Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum are compromised. Over-expression of constitutively active calcineurin in the heart rescues calreticulin-deficient mice from embryonic lethality. This observation indicates that calreticulin is a key upstream regulator of calcineurin in Ca2+-signalling pathways and highlights the importance of the endoplasmic reticulum and endoplasmic reticulum-dependent Ca2+ homeostasis for cellular commitment and tissue development during organogenesis. Furthermore, Ca2+ handling by the endoplasmic reticulum has profound effects on cell sensitivity to apoptosis. Signalling between calreticulin in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and calcineurin in the cytoplasm may play a role in the modulation of cell sensitivity to apoptosis and the regulation of Ca2+-dependent apoptotic pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Calcium release in smooth muscle   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
H Karaki  G B Weiss 《Life sciences》1988,42(2):111-122
In smooth muscle, maintenance of the contractile response is due to Ca2+ influx through two types of Ca2+ channel, a voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel and a receptor-linked Ca2+ channel. However, a more transient contraction can be obtained by release of Ca2+ from a cellular store, possibly the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In spike generating smooth muscle (e.g., guinea-pig taenia caeci), spike discharges may trigger the release of cellular Ca2+ by activating a Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release mechanism. Caffeine directly activates this mechanism in the absence of a triggered Ca2+ influx. In contrast to this, maintained depolarization may not only release but also refill the Ca2+ store. Drug-receptor interactions also release Ca2+ from a cellular store. This release may be elicited with inositol trisphosphate produced by receptor-linked phosphoinositide turnover. In non-spike generating smooth muscle (e.g., rabbit thoracic aorta), maintained membrane depolarization does not release but, instead, fills the Ca2+ store. However, caffeine and receptor-agonists release the Ca2+ store - possibly by activating the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release mechanism and phosphoinositide turnover, respectively. The Ca2+ store in smooth muscle is filled by Ca2+ entry through voltage dependent Ca2+ channels and also by resting Ca2+ influx in the absence of receptor-agonists. The Ca2+ entering the cells through these pathways may be accumulated by the Ca2+ store and may activate the contractile filaments.  相似文献   

13.
Many physiological processes are controlled by a great diversity of Ca2+ signals that depend on Ca2+ entry into the cell and/or Ca2+ release from internal Ca2+ stores. Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores is gated by a family of messengers including inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3), cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), and nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP). There is increasing evidence for a novel intracellular Ca2+ release channel that may be targeted by NAADP and that displays properties distinctly different from the well-characterized InsP3 and ryanodine receptors. These channels appear to localize on a wider range of intracellular organelles, including the acidic Ca2+ stores. Activation of the NAADP-sensitive Ca2+ channels evokes complex changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels by means of channel chatter with other intracellular Ca2+ channels. The recent demonstration of changes in intracellular NAADP levels in response to physiologically relevant extracellular stimuli highlights the significance of NAADP as an important regulator of intracellular Ca2+ signaling.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of K+ and the Ca2+ channel blocker D-600 on parathyroid hormone (PTH) release and cytoplasmic Ca2+ activity (Ca2+i) were measured at different Ca2+ concentrations in dispersed parathyroid cells from normal cattle and from patients with hyperparathyroidism. When the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was raised within the 0.5-3.0 mM range Ca2+i increased and PTH secretion was inhibited. There was also a stimulatory effect of Ca2+ on secretion as indicated by a parallel decrease of Ca2+i and PTH release when extracellular Ca2+ was reduced to less than 25 nM. Addition of 30-50 mM K+ stimulated PTH release and lowered Ca2+i. The effect of K+ was less pronounced in the human cells with a decreased suppressability of PTH release. The Ca2+ channel blocker D-600 had no effect on Ca2+i and PTH release in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. However, at 0.5-1.0 mM Ca2+, D-600 increased Ca2+i and inhibited PTH release, whereas the opposite effects were obtained at 3.0 mM Ca2+. The transition from inhibition to stimulation occurred at a higher Ca2+ concentration in the human cells and the right-shift in the dose-effect relationship for Ca2+-inhibited PTH release tended to be normalized by D-600. It is suggested that K+ stimulates PTH release by increasing the intracellular sequestration of Ca2+ and that the reduced response in the parathyroid human cells is due to the fact that Ca2+i already is lowered. D-600 appears to have both Ca2+ agonistic and antagonistic actions in facilitating and inhibiting Ca2+ influx into the parathyroid cells at low and high concentrations of extracellular Ca2+, respectively. D-600 and related drugs are considered potentially important for the treatment of hyperparathyroidism.  相似文献   

15.
Digital imaging microscopy of fluo-3 fluorescence was used to study the velocity and shape of intracellular Ca2+ waves in isolated rat cardiomyocytes as a function of temperature. Decreasing the temperature from 37 to 17 degrees C reduced the longitudinal wave velocity by a factor of 1.8 and remarkably slowed the decay of [Ca2+]i in the trailing flank of a wave. Using image analysis, rise times, and half-maximum decay times of local Ca2+ transients, which characterize the processes of local Ca2+ release and removal, were determined as a function of temperature. Apparent activation energies for wave front propagation, local Ca2+ release, and local Ca2+ removal were derived from Arrhenius plots and amounted to -23, -28, and -46 kJ/mol, respectively. The high activation energy of Ca2+ removal, which arises from the activity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ ATPase, relative to those of longitudinal wave propagation and local Ca2+ release excludes the hypothetical mechanism of regenerative "spontaneous Ca2+ release," in which Ca2+ that has been taken up from the approaching wavefront triggers Ca2+ release at a luminal site of the SR. It is consistent, however, with the hypothesis that Ca2+ wave propagation is based on Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release where Ca2+ triggers release on the cytosolic face of the SR.  相似文献   

16.
Properties of different Ca2+ pools in permeabilized rat thymocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The regulation of free Ca2+ concentration by intracellular pools and their participation in the mitogen-induced changes of the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, was studied in digitonin-permeabilized and intact rat thymocytes using a Ca2+-selective electrode, chlortetracycline fluorescence and the Ca2+ indicator quin-2. It is shown that in permeabilized thymocytes Ca2+ can be accumulated by two intracellular compartments, mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial. Ca2+ uptake by the non-mitochondrial compartment, presumably the endoplasmic reticulum, is observed only in the presence of MgATP, is increased by oxalate and inhibited by vanadate. The mitochondria do not accumulate calcium at a free Ca2+ concentration below 1 microM. The non-mitochondrial compartment has a greater affinity for calcium and is capable of sequestering Ca2+ at a free Ca2+ concentration less than 1 microM. At free Ca2+ concentration close to the cytoplasmic (0.1 microM) the main calcium pool in permeabilized thymocytes is localized in the non-mitochondrial compartment. Ca2+ accumulated in the non-mitochondrial pool can be released by inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) which has been inferred to mediate Ca2+ mobilization in a number of cell types. Under experimental conditions in which ATP-dependent Ca2+ influx is blocked, the addition of IP3 results in a large Ca2+ release from the non-mitochondrial pool; thus IP3 acts by activation of a specific efflux pathway rather than by inhibiting Ca2+ influx. SH reagents do not prevent IP3-induced Ca2+ mobilization. Addition of the mitochondrial uncouplers, FCCP or ClCCP, to intact thymocytes results in no increase in [Ca2+]i measured with quin-2 tetraoxymethyl ester whereas the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 induces a Ca2+ release from the non-mitochondrial store(s). Thus, the data obtained on intact cells agree with those obtained in permeabilized thymocytes. The mitogen concanavalin A increases [Ca2+]i in intact thymocytes suspended in both Ca2+-containing an Ca2+-free medium. This indicates a mitogen-induced mobilization of an intracellular Ca2+ pool, probably via the IP3 pathway.  相似文献   

17.
The regulation of the Ca2+ -induced Ca2+ release (CICR) from intracellular stores is a critical step in the cardiac cycle. The inherent positive feedback of CICR should make it a self-regenerating process. It is accepted that CICR must be governed by some negative control, but its nature is still debated. We explore here the importance of the Ca2+ released from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) on the mechanisms that may control CICR. Specifically, we compared the effect of replacing Ca2+ with Sr2+ on intracellular Ca2+ signaling in intact cardiac myocytes as well as on the function of single ryanodine receptor (RyR) Ca2+ release channels in panar bilayers. In cells, both CICR and Sr2+ -induced Sr2+ release (SISR) were observed. Action potential induced Ca2+ -transients and spontaneous Ca2+ waves were considerably faster than their Sr2+ -mediated counterparts. However, the kinetics of Ca2+ and Sr2+ sparks was similar. At the single RyR channel level, the affinities of Ca2+ and Sr2+ activation were different but the affinities of Ca2+ and Sr2+ inactivation were similar. Fast Ca2+ and Sr2+ stimuli activated RyR channels equally fast but adaptation (a spontaneous slow transition back to steady-state activity levels) was not observed in the Sr2+ case. Together, these results suggest that regulation of the RyR channel by cytosolic Ca2+ is not involved in turning off the Ca2+ spark. In contrast, cytosolic Ca2+ is important in the propagation global Ca2+ release events and in this regard single RyR channel sensitivity to cytosolic Ca2+ activation, not low-affinity cytosolic Ca2+ inactivation, is a key factor. This suggests that the kinetics of local and global RyR-mediated Ca2+ release signals are affected in a distinct way by different divalent cations in cardiac muscle cells.  相似文献   

18.
Isolated canine cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum exhibits Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from both actively and passively loaded vesicles. The rate and extent of Ca2+ release depend on the extravesicular ionized Ca2+ concentration ( [Ca2+]o) at the onset of release. Maximal release following ATP-dependent, phosphate-facilitated Ca2+ loading (up to 360 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein/min at 37 degrees C) occurs at 1.5-2 microM [Ca2+]o, with reduced release at both lower and higher Ca2+ concentrations (half-maximal Ca2+ release at approximately 0.8 and 5.5 microM [Ca2+]o). Only a portion of the accumulated Ca2+ is released and the release is followed by reuptake of Ca2+. A similar Ca2+ dependence is obtained in the absence of ATP and Pi by measuring unidirectional Ca2+ efflux from passively loaded vesicles (maximal Ca2+ efflux at 1 microM [Ca2+]o; half-maximal Ca2+-dependent efflux at approximately 0.15 and 13 microM [Ca2+]o). Although the Ca2+ release rates observed in this study are several orders of magnitude lower than the rate of Ca2+ release which occurs in muscle cells in vivo, this Ca2+ release phenomenon may be related to the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release which has been described for skinned cardiac cells ( Fabiato , A. (1983) Am. J. Physiol. 245, C1-C14). Ca2+ release occurs in the presence of an ATP-regenerating system and is not accompanied by a reduction in ATP hydrolysis. Also, since unidirectional Ca2+ efflux (as high as 860 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein/min at 37 degrees C) exceeds net Ca2+ release under similar conditions, Ca2+ influx proceeds during the period of net Ca2+ release. Therefore, Ca2+ release does not involve reversal or cessation of inward Ca2+ pumping. Other data indicate that Ca2+ release is not mediated through the Ca2+ pump protein, but occurs through a separate Ca2+-dependent efflux pathway, possibly a channel.  相似文献   

19.
S C Chow  M Jondal 《Cell calcium》1990,11(10):641-646
Using alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), one of several polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) that have previously been shown to both mobilize intracellular Ca2+ from the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-sensitive Ca2+ pool independently of IP3 production and inhibit Ca2+ influx, the relationship between Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores and Ca2+ influx in T cells (JURKAT) was studied. JURKAT cells were treated with 30 microM ALA to deplete the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool. When the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration [( Ca2+]i) returned to basal level, fatty acid free bovine serum albumin (BSA) was added to remove extracellular and membrane bound ALA. This resulted in a sustained increase in [Ca2+]i in the absence of inositol phosphates' formation. This sustained increase in [Ca2+]i was insensitive to protein kinase C activation but was inhibited by Ni2+ ions. The extent of Ca2+ influx was found to be correlated to the amount of Ca2+ initially discharged from the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool by sub-optimal concentrations of ALA. Ligation of the CD3 complex of the T cell antigen receptor with an anti-CD3 antibody (OKT3) during the sustained [Ca2+]i increased (induced by a sub-optimal concentration of ALA), produced a greater response. No increase in the sustained response was observed when the CD3 complex was activated in cells pretreated with an optimal concentration of ALA. In summary, Ca2+ entry in T cells is activated by emptying of the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool which can be dissociated from inositol phosphate production. The rate of Ca2+ influx appears to be closely correlated to the initial discharge of Ca2+ from the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool, suggesting that Ca2+ may first enter the depleted pool and then is released into the cytosol.  相似文献   

20.
Energy-dependent Ca2+ uptake was characterized in vesicles derived from rat submandibular salivary glands. Ca2+ transport was stimulated by submicromolar levels of Ca2+, reached a plateau at 1-20 microM Ca2+ then again increased as the Ca2+ concentration rose to millimolar levels. Ruthenium red (2.5 microM) was used to resolve this pattern of uptake into two components: ruthenium red-insensitive Ca2+ transport occurs in the presence of the dye, is stimulated by submicromolar Ca2+ concentrations and reaches a maximum steady state at about 1 microM Ca2+. The distribution of ruthenium red-insensitive Ca2+ uptake in membrane subfractions obtained by differential centrifugation is positively (r = 0.717) and significantly (p = 0.001) correlated with the distribution of membrane-bound RNA in the same subfractions. Ca2+ uptake which is abolished by ruthenium red is greatest at millimolar Ca2+ concentrations. Its distribution is positively (r = 0.828) and significantly (p = 0.0001) correlated with the cytochrome-c oxidase activity of the membrane subfractions but is unrelated to the distribution of particulate RNA and is negatively correlated with Na+-K+ ATPase activity. We conclude that vesicles derived from the endoplasmic reticulum of rat submandibular glands actively transport Ca2+ by a ruthenium red-insensitive mechanism which is stimulated at Ca2+ concentrations typical of the cytosol. Membranes derived from mitochondria also sequester Ca2+ but by a mechanism which is inhibited by ruthenium red and which reaches its maximum steady state capacity at relatively high Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

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