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1.
Stimulation of human platelets increases cytoplasmic pH (pHi) via activation of Na+/H+ exchange. We have determined the effect of inhibiting Na+/H+ exchange on (i) thrombin-induced Ca2+ mobilization and (ii) turnover of 32P-labelled phospholipids. Blocking Na+/H+ exchange by removal of extracellular Na+ or by ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA) inhibited Ca2+ mobilization induced by 0.2 U/ml thrombin, whereas increasing pHi by NH4Cl enhanced the thrombin-induced increase in cytosolic free Ca2+. The effect of EIPA was bypassed after increasing pHi by moneasin. The thrombin-induced cleavage of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) was unaffected by treatments that blocked Na+/H+ exchange or increased pHi. It is concluded that activation of Na+/H+ exchange is a prerequisite for Ca2+ mobilization in human platelets but not for the stimulus-induced hydrolysis of PIP2.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of extracellular Na+ removal and replacement with other cations on receptor-mediated arachidonate release in platelets was studied to investigate the role of Na+/H+ exchange in this process. Replacement with choline+, K+, N-methylglucamine+ (which abolished the thrombin-induced pHi rise) or Li+ (which allowed a normal thrombin-induced pHi rise) significantly decreased arachidonate release in response to all concentrations (threshold to supra-maximal) of thrombin and collagen. This inhibition was not reversed by NH4Cl (10 mM) addition, which raised the pHi in the absence of Na+, but, on the contrary, NH4Cl addition further decreased the extent of thrombin- and collagen-induced arachidonate release, as well as decreasing 'weak'-agonist (ADP, adrenaline)-induced release and granule secretion in platelet-rich plasma. No detectable pHi rises were seen with collagen (1-20 micrograms/ml) and ADP (10 microM) in bis-(carboxyethyl)carboxyfluorescein-loaded platelets. Inhibition of thrombin-induced pHi rises was seen with 0.5-5 microM-5-NN-ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA), but at these concentrations EIPA had little effect on thrombin-induced arachidonate release. At higher concentrations such as those used in previous studies (20-50 microM), EIPA inhibited aggregation/release induced by collagen and ADP in Na+ buffer as well as in choline+ buffer (where there was no detectable exchanger activity), suggesting that these concentrations of EIPA exert 'non-specific' effects at the membrane level. The results suggest that (i) Na+/H+ exchange and pHi elevations are not only necessary, but are probably inhibitory, to receptor-mediated arachidonate release in platelets, (ii) inhibition of receptor-mediated release in the absence of Na+ is most likely due to the absent Na+ ion itself, and (iii) caution should be exercised in the use of compounds such as EIPA, which, apart from inhibiting the Na+/H+ exchanger, have other undesirable and misleading effects in platelets.  相似文献   

3.
Control of cytoplasmic pH (pHi) by a Na+/H+ antiport appears a general property of most eukaryotic cells. In human platelets activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger enhances Ca2+ mobilization and aggregation induced by low concentrations of thrombin (Siffert, W., and Akkerman, J. W. N. (1987) Nature 325, 456-458). Several observations indicate that the exchanger is regulated by protein kinase C. (i) Inhibitors of protein kinase C (trifluoperazine, sphingosine) inhibit the increase in pHi seen during thrombin stimulation as well as Ca2+ mobilization; artificially increasing pHi by monensin or NH4Cl then restores Ca2+ mobilization. (ii) Direct activation of protein kinase C by 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol initiates an increase in pHi that depends on the presence of extracellular Na+ and is sensitive to inhibition by ethylisopropylamiloride. The pHi sensitivity of thrombin-induced Ca2+ mobilization is particularly evident in the range between pH 6.8 and 7.4 and at low thrombin concentrations, whereas thrombin concentrations of more than 0.2 unit/ml bypass the pH sensitivity. In the absence of thrombin an increase in pHi, either induced artificially (by addition of the ionophores nigericin or monensin) or via activation of protein kinase C (by addition of 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol), does not induce Ca2+ mobilization. We conclude that activation of protein kinase C is essential for Ca2+ mobilization in platelets stimulated by low concentrations of thrombin and that protein kinase C exerts this effect via activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger.  相似文献   

4.
Intracellular free Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i) and pH (pHi) were measured simultaneously by dual wavelength excitation in thrombin-stimulated human platelets double-labeled with the fluorescent probes fura2 and 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein to determine the relationship between changes in [Ca2+]i and pHi, respectively. At 37 degrees C, thrombin (0.5 or 0.1 units/ml) increased [Ca2+]i with no detectable lag period to maximum levels within 13 s followed by a slow return to resting levels. There was a transient decrease in pHi within 9 s that was immediately followed by an alkalinization response, attributable to activation of Na+/H+ exchange, that raised pHi above resting levels within 22 s. At 10-15 degrees C, thrombin-induced changes in [Ca2+]i and pHi were delayed and therefore better resolved, although no differences in the magnitude of changes in [Ca2+]i and pHi were observed. However, the increase in [Ca2+]i had peaked or was declining before the alkalinization response was detected, suggesting that Ca2+ mobilization occurs before activation of Na+/H+ exchange. In platelets preincubated with 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride or gel-filtered in Na+-free buffer (Na+ replaced with N-methyl-D-glutamine) to inhibit Na+/H+ exchange, thrombin stimulation caused a rapid, sustained decrease in pHi. Under these conditions there was complete inhibition of the alkalinization response, whereas Ca2+ mobilization was only partially inhibited. Nigericin (a K+/H+ ionophore) caused a rapid acidification of more than 0.3 pH unit that was sustained in the presence of 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride. Subsequent stimulation with thrombin resulted in slight inhibition of Ca2+ mobilization. These data show that, in human platelets stimulated with high or low concentrations of thrombin, Ca2+ mobilization can occur without a functional Na+/H+ exchanger and in an acidified cytoplasm. We conclude that Ca2+ mobilization does not require activation of Na+/H+ exchange or preliminary cytoplasmic alkalinization.  相似文献   

5.
The regulation of intracellular Na+ and pHi in human blood platelets is known to be controlled by the function of the Na+/H+ exchanger. The phosphorylation state of the Na+/H+ exchanger which determines the exchanger activity in human blood platelets is regulated by the activities of protein kinases and protein phosphatases. Observations in this study indicate that arginine vasopressin (AVP) that interacts with a V1 receptor, activates the Na+/H+ exchange in human blood platelets through a genistein-inhibited mechanism. The AVP-activated Na+/H+ exchange is probably not regulated by protein kinase C (PKC), since this activation is not inhibited by staurosporine. The multiple ways in which platelet Na+/H+ exchange can be modulated may indicate the critical role played by this exchanger in the homeostasis control of pHi in human blood platelets.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphorylation of the Na+/H+ exchanger in human platelets is apparently controlled by the balancing activities of protein kinase C (PKC) and protein phosphatase (PP). To explore cellular expressions of these activities, we have examined the impact of modulation of PKC and PP on Na+/H+ exchange activity, its pHi set point and intracellular pH (pHi). These parameters were followed spectrofluorimetrically in BCECF-loaded platelets. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and dihexanoylglycerol (DHG), which stimulate PKC, and okadaic acid, which inhibits PP 1 and 2A, elevate the measured parameters in concert, while staurosporine, which inhibits protein kinases, had opposite effects. The stimulatory and inhibitory effects are similarly very rapid, being discerned within seconds. It is concluded that: (a) phosphorylation of the Na+/H+ exchanger is the common origin of the diverse effects of PMA, DHG, okadaic acid and staurosporine, (b) Na+/H+ exchange properties are tightly regulated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, and (c) the exchanger plays a major role in pHi regulation in platelets.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism by which human alpha-thrombin activates the Na+/H+ exchanger was studied in cultured neonatal rat aortic smooth muscle cells. Thrombin (0.4 unit/ml) caused a rapid cell acidification followed by a slow, amiloride-inhibitable alkalinization (0.10-0.14 delta pHi above base line). In protein kinase C down-regulated cells (exposed to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate for 24 or 72 h), the delta pHi induced by thrombin was only partially attenuated. This protein kinase C-independent activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger was blocked by pertussis toxin (islet activating protein (IAP)), reducing delta pHi by 50%. IAP did not directly inhibit Na+/H+ exchange activity as assessed by the response to intracellular acid loading. Thrombin also stimulated arachidonic acid release by 2.5 fold and inositol trisphosphate release by 6.2 fold. IAP inhibited both of these activities by 50-60%. Intracellular Ca2+ chelation with 120 microM quin2 prevented the thrombin-induced Ca2+ spike, inhibited thrombin-induced arachidonic acid release by 75%, and inhibited thrombin-induced activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger in protein kinase C-deficient cells by 65%. Increased intracellular [Ca2+] alone was not sufficient to activate the Na+/H+ exchanger, since ionomycin (0.3-1.5 microM) failed to elevate cell pH significantly. 10 microM indomethacin inhibited thrombin-induced delta pHi in both control and protein kinase C down-regulated cells by 30-50%. Thus, thrombin can activate the Na+/H+ exchanger in vascular smooth muscle cells by a Ca2+-dependent, pertussis toxin-sensitive pathway which does not involve protein kinase C.  相似文献   

8.
Intracellular pH (pHi) of human platelets was measured with the fluorescent dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)5,6-carboxyfluorescein under various conditions. Stimulation by thrombin at 23 degrees C caused a biphasic change in pHi (initial pHi 7.09); a rapid fall of 0.01-0.04 units (correlated with the rise of [Ca2+]i measured with quin2) followed after 10-15 s by a sustained rise of 0.1-0.15 units pHi. The fall of pHi and [Ca2+]i mobilization was reduced by early (5 s) addition of hirudin, but the later elevated pHi was not reversed by hirudin added after 30 s, although this strips thrombin from receptors and rapidly returns [Ca2+]i to basal levels. In Na+-free medium, or in presence of the Na+/H+ antiport inhibitors, 5-(N,N-dimethyl)amiloride (DMA) or 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride (EIPA), thrombin caused a greater fall of pHi (0.22-0.26 units) that was sustained. DMA or EIPA could also reverse the alkalinization response to thrombin. Ca2+ ionophores (ionomycin, A23187) decreased platelet pHi by 0.02-0.15 units, but without an increase of pHi comparable to that following thrombin; DMA and EIPA enhanced the fall of pHi (0.14-0.33 units). Cytoplasmic acidification produced by nigericin (K+/H+ ionophore) was followed by return towards normal that was abolished by Na+/H+ antiport inhibitors. The phorbol diester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate had little effect on resting pHi but increased the rate of recovery 2-3-fold after cytoplasmic acidification by nigericin, ionomycin, or sodium propionate. These results indicate that elevation of [Ca2+]i by thrombin enhances H+ production, but the subsequent alkalinization is independent of receptor occupancy or elevated [Ca2+]i and stimulation of the Na+/H+ antiporter by thrombin probably involves some mechanism apart from regulation by H+ and protein kinase C.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of matrix pH (pHi) on the activity of the mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ antiport has been studied using the fluorescence of SNARF-1 to monitor pHi and Na(+)-dependent efflux of accumulated Ca2+ to follow antiport activity. Heart mitochondria respiring in a KCl medium maintain a large delta pH (interior alkaline) and show optimal Na+/Ca2+ antiport only when the pH of the medium (pH0) is acid. Addition of nigericin to these mitochondria decreases delta pH and increases the membrane potential (delta psi). Nigericin strongly activates Na+/Ca2+ antiport at values of pH0 near 7.4 but inhibits antiport activity at acid pH0. When pHi is evaluated in these protocols, a sharp optimum in Na+/Ca2+ antiport activity is seen near pHi 7.6 in the presence or absence of nigericin. Activity falls off rapidly at more alkaline values of pHi. The effects of nigericin on Na+/Ca2+ antiport are duplicated by 20 mM acetate and by 3 mM phosphate. In each case the optimum rate of Na+/Ca2+ antiport is obtained at pHi 7.5 to 7.6 and changes in antiport activity do not correlate with changes in components of the driving force of the reaction (i.e., delta psi, delta pH, or the steady-state Na+ gradient). It is concluded that the Na+/Ca2+ antiport of heart mitochondria is very sensitive to matrix [H+] and that changes in pHi may contribute to the regulation of matrix Ca2+ levels.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied synergism between adrenaline (epinephrine) and low concentrations of thrombin in gel-filtered human platelets prelabelled with [32P]Pi. Suspensions of platelets, which did not contain added fibrinogen, were incubated at 37 degrees C to measure changes in the levels of 32P-labelled phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP) and phosphatidate (PA), aggregation and dense-granule secretion after stimulation. Adrenaline alone (3.5-4.0 microM) did not cause a change in any parameter (phosphoinositide metabolism, aggregation and dense-granule secretion), but markedly enhanced the thrombin-induced responses over a narrow range of thrombin concentrations (0.03-0.08 units/ml). The thrombin-induced hydrolysis of inositol phospholipids by phospholipase C, which was measured as the formation of [32P]PA, was potentiated by adrenaline, as was the increase in the levels of [32P]PIP2 and [32P]PIP. The presence of adrenaline caused a shift to the left for the thrombin-induced changes in the phosphoinositide metabolism, without affecting the maximal levels of 32P-labelled compounds obtained. A similar shift by adrenaline in the dose-response relationship was previously demonstrated for thrombin-induced aggregation and dense-granule secretion. Also, the narrow range of concentrations of thrombin over which adrenaline potentiates thrombin-induced platelet responses is the same for changes in phosphoinositide metabolism and physiological responses (aggregation and dense-granule secretion). Our observations clearly indicate that adrenaline directly or indirectly influences thrombin-induced changes in phosphoinositide metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
According to recent observations ADP stimulates platelets via activation of Na+/H+ exchange which increases cytosolic pH (pHi). This event initiates formation of thromboxane A2 (via phospholipase A2) and, thereafter, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (via phospholipase C) which is known to mobilize Ca2+ from intracellular storage sites. We investigated changes in pHi and cytosolic free Ca2+, [Ca2+]i, activating platelets with ADP and the thromboxane mimetic U 46619. We found that ADP (5 microM) increased pHi from 7.15 +/- 0.08 to 7.35 +/- 0.04 (n = 8) in 2'-7'-bis-(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein-loaded platelets, whereas thromboxane A2 formation was inhibited by indomethacin. ADP also induced a dose-dependent Ca2+ mobilization in fura2-loaded platelets which again was not affected by indomethacin. [Ca2+]i increased by 54 +/- 10 nM (n = 8) at 1 microM and by 170 +/- 40 nM (n = 7) at 10 microM ADP above the resting value of 76 +/- 12 nM (n = 47). Inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange by ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA) reduced ADP-induced Ca2+ mobilization by more than 65% in indomethacin-treated platelets. This inhibition could be completely overcome by artificially raising pHi using either NH4Cl or the Na+/H+ ionophore monensin. We found that U 46619 increased pHi by 0.18 +/- 0.05 at 0.1 microM and by 0.29 +/- 0.07 (n = 7) at 1.0 microM above the resting value via an EIPA-sensitive mechanism. In conflict with the proposed role of the Na+/H+ exchange we found that U 46619 raised [Ca2+]i via a mechanism that for more than 50% depended on intact Na+/H+ exchange. Again, artificially elevating pHi restored U 46619-induced Ca2+ mobilization despite the presence of EIPA. Thus, our data show that Na+/H+ exchange is a common step in platelet activation by prostaglandin endoperoxides/thromboxane A2 and ADP and enhances Ca2+ mobilization independently of phospholipase A2 activity.  相似文献   

12.
Inhibition of activation has been reported when neutrophils are suspended in Na+-free media. We considered the possibility that impairment of cellular pH (pHi) regulation due to elimination of Na+/H+ exchange underlies this effect. In the absence of Na+, the phorbol ester-induced respiratory burst was partially inhibited and a concomitant cytoplasmic acidification recorded. Using nigericin/K+ to clamp pHi we demonstrated that the acidification accounts for the inhibition of O2 uptake. Moreover, in Na+-free media, relieving the acidification by means of ionophores restored maximal O2 consumption. It was concluded that Na+ is not directly involved in signal transduction during stimulation. Instead, omission of Na+ affects neutrophils activation indirectly, by impairing pHi regulation.  相似文献   

13.
Stimulation of platelets with thrombin leads to rapid degradation of inositol phospholipids, generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) and subsequent activation of protein kinase C (PKC). Previous studies indicated that prior activation of PKC with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) desensitizes platelets to thrombin stimulation, as indicated by a decreased production of inositol phosphates and decreased Ca2+ mobilization. This suggests that PKC activation generates negative-feedback signals, which limit the phosphoinositide response. To test this hypothesis further, we examined the effects of PKC activators and inhibitors on thrombin-stimulated DAG mass formation in platelets. Pretreatment with PMA abolishes thrombin-stimulated DAG formation (50% inhibition at 60 nM). Pretreatment of platelets with the PKC inhibitors K252a or staurosporine potentiates DAG production in response to thrombin (3-4-fold) when using concentrations required to inhibit platelet PKC (1-10 microM). K252a does not inhibit phosphorylation of endogenous DAG or phosphorylation of a cell-permeant DAG in unstimulated platelets, indicating that DAG over-production is not due to inhibition of DAG kinase. Sphingosine, a PKC inhibitor with a different mechanism of action, also potentiates DAG formation in response to thrombin. Several lines of evidence indicate that DAG formation under the conditions employed occurs predominantly by phosphoinositide (and not phosphatidylcholine) hydrolysis: (1) PMA alone does not elicit DAG formation, but inhibits agonist-stimulated DAG formation; (2) thrombin-stimulated DAG formation is inhibited by neomycin (1-10 mM) but not by the phosphatidate phosphohydrolase inhibitor propranolol; and (3) no metabolism of radiolabelled phosphatidylcholine was observed upon stimulation by thrombin or PMA. These data provide strong support for a role of PKC in limiting the extent of platelet phosphoinositide hydrolysis.  相似文献   

14.
In Aplysia californica, the serotonin-mediated translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) Apl II to neuronal membranes is important for synaptic plasticity. The orthologue of PKC Apl II, PKC, has been reported to require phosphatidic acid (PA) in conjunction with diacylglycerol (DAG) for translocation. We find that PKC Apl II can be synergistically translocated to membranes by the combination of DAG and PA. We identify a mutation in the C1b domain (arginine 273 to histidine; PKC Apl II-R273H) that removes the effects of exogenous PA. In Aplysia neurons, the inhibition of endogenous PA production by 1-butanol inhibited the physiological translocation of PKC Apl II by serotonin in the cell body and at the synapse but not the translocation of PKC Apl II-R273H. The translocation of PKC Apl II-R273H in the absence of PA was explained by two additional effects of this mutation: (i) the mutation removed C2 domain-mediated inhibition, and (ii) the mutation decreased the concentration of DAG required for PKC Apl II translocation. We present a model in which, under physiological conditions, PA is important to activate the novel PKC Apl II both by synergizing with DAG and removing C2 domain-mediated inhibition.  相似文献   

15.
When human platelets are stimulated with thrombin or activators of protein kinase C, cytosolic pH (pHi) increases due to activation of Na+/H+ exchange. In order to further elucidate the molecular mechanisms that regulate the exchanger, we used sodium fluoride, which is a known activator of guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins) in platelets. Although NaF induced the mobilization of Ca2+ from intracellular storage sites in fura2-loaded platelets, it failed to raise pHi as determined from the fluorescence of 2,7-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein-loaded platelets. Furthermore, when thrombin (0.1 unit/ml) or the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) had raised pHi from 7.13 +/- 0.05 to 7.35 +/- 0.07 (n = 30), addition of NaF (2.5-10 mM) rapidly restored pHi to values found before stimulation. Conversely, preincubation of platelets with low concentrations of NaF (2.5 mM) completely prevented alkalinization in response to thrombin or TPA. Unlike ethylisopropylamiloride, which completely blocked Na+/H+ exchange, NaF did not prevent the recovery of pHi from an artificial acid load. Hence, the inhibitory action of NaF is restricted to receptor-mediated activation of the antiport. In order to investigate whether the NaF effect was attributable to a G protein, platelets were preincubated with N-ethylmaleimide (50 microM), which is known to inhibit the adenylyl cyclase-inhibitory G protein. N-Ethylmaleimide treatment not only prevented inhibition of adenylyl cyclase by epinephrine but also completely reversed the inhibitory effect of NaF on the Na+/H+ exchanger. Our data suggest the existence of a novel G protein which is activated by fluoride and functions as a negative regulator of the Na+/H+ exchanger in platelets.  相似文献   

16.
The Na+/H+ exchange time-course of BCECF-loaded human platelets, suspended in isotonic media containing NaCl and sodium propionate and activated by intracellular acidification, was measured spectrofluorimetrically. Sequential alkalinization rates decline exponentially as a function of the changing intracellular pH (pHi) and its linear expression (log rate vs. pHi) extrapolates reproducibly to the pHi set point for the Na+/H+ exchange activation. The set point of control platelets (7.28 +/- 0.01) is shifted rapidly (discernibly less than or equal to 30 s) and markedly to alkaline pHi (7.62 +/- 0.03) by PMA, that activates protein kinase C and is shifted to acidic pHi (7.05 +/- 0.01) by staurosporine, which inhibits protein kinases. The addition of 5-N-(3-aminophenyl)amiloride reveals that the alkalinization measured is predominantly Na+/H+ exchange with only a minute contribution (delta pHi = 0.012 +/- 0.002 in 1 min) of an acid loading component, at pHi greater than 7.2. The results support recent studies concluding that the set point indeed reflects the phosphorylation state of the Na+/H+ exchanger.  相似文献   

17.
The biochemical responses of intact human platelets to the monoclonal antibody (mAb) AG-1 were investigated. AG-1 is a murine IgG mAb that recognizes a series of platelet membrane glycoproteins (Gp) from M(r) 21,000 to 29,000, one of which is the M(r) 24,000 (p24) receptor for anti-CD9 mAbs. AG-1 causes platelet aggregation and secretion. Platelets binding AG-1 demonstrate a dose- and time-dependent breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), production of diacylglycerol, and generation of phosphatidic acid (PA). These events are associated with the activation of protein kinase C (PKC), an increase in intracellular calcium, and fibrinogen binding. Platelet PA generation and PKC activation in response to AG-1 are inhibited by mAbs to platelet GpIIb-IIIa or by extracellular EGTA, but not by a mAb to platelet GpIb or by inhibiting platelet Na+/H+ exchange with 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride. Platelet cytoplasmic free calcium ([Ca2+]i) is elevated in response to AG-1, and this elevation is inhibited by mAbs to GpIIb-IIIa, an RGDS peptide or by chelating extracellular calcium. These results suggest that AG-1 binding to a unique platelet-surface glycoprotein initiates platelet responses through the activation of PIP2-specific phospholipase C, and that this occurs through a signal pathway that is dependent on GpIIb-IIIa and extracellular calcium.  相似文献   

18.
In experiments on human and rat platelets the changes in cytoplasmic pH (pHi) and Ca2+ concentration (Ca2+) have been studied by the use of fluorescent probes BCECF and quin-2, respectively. Inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange resulted in removal of external Na+ (equimolar substitution by cholin) induced a considerable reduction of Ca2+-signal caused by 10 mMPAF, and a slight decrease in Ca2+-signal elicited by 0.1 mu/ml thrombin. In the control Na+ and Ca2+ containing medium both PAF and thrombin induced first a decrease then an increase of pHi above its original level. The latter phase being much more pronounced in the case of thrombin action. Removal of Ca2+ from the external solution suppressed pHi increase and correspondingly it enhanced initial decrease. Addition of Ni2+ also suppressed stimulus-induced pHi increase. A treatment of platelets by Ca-ionophore A23187 caused a rise of pHi without its initial decrease; in medium without Ca2+ the changes of pHi were inhibited. The results obtained suggest that in platelets there exist a mutual interdependence between Ca2+ influx and change in pHi: Ca2+ influx enhanced the activation of Na+/H+ exchange by agonist; in turn Na+/H+ exchange activation enhances the stimulus-induced Ca2+ influx.  相似文献   

19.
The calcium dependence of growth factor-induced cytoplasmic alkalinization was determined in serum-deprived human fibroblasts (WS-1 cells). Intracellular pH (pHi) and intracellular calcium (Ca2+i) were measured using the fluorescent dyes 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein and fura2, respectively. Thrombin (10 nM) induced an alkalinization (0.18 +/- 0.01 pH units, n = 23) that was Na+-dependent and amiloride-sensitive, suggesting that the alkalinization was mediated by the Na+/H+ exchanger. Thrombin treatment caused a transient increase in Ca2+i (325 +/- 39 nM, n = 12) that preceded the observed increase in pHi. The increases in Ca2+i and pHi were dependent on the concentration of thrombin. The thrombin-induced increase in Ca2+i occurred in the absence of external calcium indicating that thrombin released calcium from internal stores. Inhibition of the thrombin-induced increase in Ca2+i with 8-diethylaminooctyl 3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride or bis-(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'- tetraacetic acid also inhibited the thrombin-stimulated increase in pHi. The calcium ionophore ionomycin was used to increase Ca2+i independent of growth factor stimulation. When Ca2+i was elevated with ionomycin, a concomitant increase in pHi was observed. The increase in pHi due to ionomycin was dependent on Na+ and sensitive to amiloride. The removal of external Ca2+i inhibited the ionomycin-induced elevation of both Ca2+i and pHi. The ionomycin-induced increases in Ca2+i and pHi were not inhibited by 8-diethylaminooctyl 3,4,5-trimethoxy-benzoate hydrochloride. The results suggest that thrombin treatment can activate the Na+/H+ exchanger, and this activation is mediated by an increase in Ca2+i.  相似文献   

20.
The fluorescence of internalized fluorescein isothiocyanate dextran has been used to monitor the intravesicular pH of submitochondrial particles (SMP). Respiring SMP maintain a steady-state delta pH (interior acid) that results from the inwardly directed H+ flux of respiration and an opposing passive H+ leak. Addition of K+, Na+, or Li+ to SMP results in a shift to a more alkaline interior pH (pHi) in both respiring and nonrespiring SMP. The K+-dependent change in pHi, like the K+/H+ antiport in intact mitochondria, is inhibited by quinine and by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. The Na+-dependent reaction is only partially inhibited by these reagents. Both the Na+- and the K+-dependent pH changes are sensitive to amiloride derivatives. The Km for both Na+ and K+ is near 20 mM whereas that for Li+ is closer to 10 mM. The K+/H+ exchange reaction is only slightly inhibited by added Mg2+, but abolished when A23187 is added with Mg2+. The passive exchange is optimal at pHi 6.5 with either Na+ or K+, and cannot be detected above pHi of 7.2. Both the Na+/H+ and the K+/H+ exchange reactions are optimal at an external pH of 7.8 in respiring SMP (pHi 7.1). Valinomycin stimulates the K+-dependent pH change in nonrespiring SMP, as does nigericin. It is concluded that SMP show K+/H+ antiport activity with properties distinct from those of Na+/H+ antiport. However, the properties of the K+/H+ exchange do not correspond in all respects to those of the antiport in intact mitochondria. Donnan equilibria and parallel uniport pathways for H+ and cations appear to contribute to cation-dependent pH changes in SMP.  相似文献   

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