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1.
Ca2+ uptake and IP3-induced Ca2+ release in permeabilized human lymphocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
G Eberl  K Schnell 《FEBS letters》1987,222(2):349-352
The 45Ca2+ uptake and 45Ca2+ release in saponin-permeabilized human lymphocytes were studied. An ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake into a nonmitochondrial, intracellular Ca2+ store is observed which is approx. 2 orders of magnitude greater than the ATP-independent Ca2+ uptake. The Ca2+ uptake is inhibited by vanadate, but it is insensitive to oligomycin and ruthenium red. IP3 induces dose-dependent 45Ca2+ release. For half-maximum Ca2+ release 0.25-0.5 microM IP3 is required. The results of our studies suggest that 45Ca2+ is predominantly stored within the endoplasmic reticulum of the lymphocytes.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA) inhibition on the cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) was studied in primary insulin-releasing pancreatic beta-cells isolated from mice, rats and human subjects as well as in clonal rat insulinoma INS-1 cells. In Ca(2+)-deficient medium the individual primary beta-cells reacted to the SERCA inhibitor cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) with a slow rise of [Ca(2+)](i) followed by an explosive transient elevation. The [Ca(2+)](i) transients were preferentially observed at low intracellular concentrations of the Ca(2+) indicator fura-2 and were unaffected by pre-treatment with 100 microM ryanodine. Whereas 20mM caffeine had no effect on basal [Ca(2+)](i) or the slow rise in response to CPA, it completely prevented the CPA-induced [Ca(2+)](i) transients as well as inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-mediated [Ca(2+)](i) transients in response to carbachol. In striking contrast to the primary beta-cells, caffeine readily mobilized intracellular Ca(2+) in INS-1 cells under identical conditions, and such mobilization was prevented by ryanodine pre-treatment. The results indicate that leakage of Ca(2+) from the endoplasmic reticulum after SERCA inhibition is feedback-accelerated by Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR). In primary pancreatic beta-cells this CICR is due to activation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors. CICR by ryanodine receptor activation may be restricted to clonal beta-cells.  相似文献   

3.
Cytosolic free Ca2+ rises in pancreatic beta-cells in response to glucose stimulation and is part of the coupling to insulin secretion. This study evaluates a possible role for cytosolic long chain acyl-CoA esters in modulating Ca2+ handling by clonal beta-cells (HIT). Intact cells incubated with 20 microM free palmitic acid exhibited a 40% decrease in basal cytosolic free Ca2+. In contrast, acyl-CoA esters, up to a chain length of 16, but not the corresponding fatty acids, significantly lowered the Ca2+ set point maintained by cells permeabilized with saponin. The maximum response to the various acyl-CoA esters increased with increasing chain length, with no differences in the half-maximally effective concentration of 0.5 microM. Long chain acyl-CoA esters caused a 40-50% increase in 45Ca2+ influx into a non-mitochondrial pool in the permeabilized HIT cells, consistent with a stimulatory effect on the endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase activity, but did not affect inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-induced Ca(2+)-efflux. Thapsigargin, an inhibitor of endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase activity, blocked the decrease in the Ca2+ set point caused by acyl-CoA esters. The ability of acyl-CoA esters to lower the Ca2+ set point depended on the ATP/ADP ratio (or free ADP); the Ca2+ set point was lowered by 36 +/- 3.6% at an ATP/ADP ratio of 90 and by 14 +/- 1.9% at an ATP/ADP ratio of 7. Depletion of cellular protein kinase C did not prevent the acyl-CoA-induced lowering of the Ca2+ set point. These findings suggest that the increases in long chain acyl-CoA esters may play a role in restoring cytosolic free Ca2+ through activation of Ca(2+)-ATPases.  相似文献   

4.
The second messenger cAMP exerts powerful stimulatory effects on Ca(2+) signaling and insulin secretion in pancreatic beta-cells. Previous studies of beta-cells focused on protein kinase A (PKA) as a downstream effector of cAMP action. However, it is now apparent that cAMP also exerts its effects by binding to cAMP-regulated guanine nucleotide exchange factors (Epac). Although one effector of Epac is the Ras-related G protein Rap1, it is not fully understood what the functional consequences of Epac-mediated signal transduction are at the cellular level. 8-(4-chloro-phenylthio)-2'-O-methyladenosine-3'-5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-pCPT-2'-O-Me-cAMP) is a newly described cAMP analog, and it activates Epac but not PKA. Here we demonstrate that 8-pCPT-2'-O-Me-cAMP acts in human pancreatic beta-cells and INS-1 insulin-secreting cells to mobilize Ca(2+) from intracellular Ca(2+) stores via Epac-mediated Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR). The cAMP-dependent increase of [Ca(2+)](i) that accompanies CICR is shown to be coupled to exocytosis. We propose that the interaction of cAMP and Epac to trigger CICR explains, at least in part, the blood glucose-lowering properties of an insulinotropic hormone (glucagon-like peptide-1, also known as GLP-1) now under investigation for use in the treatment of type-2 diabetes mellitus.  相似文献   

5.
Stimulus-secretion coupling in pancreatic beta-cells involves membrane depolarization and Ca(2+) entry through voltage-gated L-type Ca(2+) channels, which is one determinant of increases in the cytoplasmic free Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). We investigated how the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated Ca(2+) apparatus further modifies this Ca(2+) signal. When fura-2-loaded mouse beta-cells were depolarized by KCl in the presence of 3 mm glucose, [Ca(2+)](i) increased to a peak in two phases. The second phase of the [Ca(2+)](i) increase was abolished when ER Ca(2+) stores were depleted by thapsigargin. The steady-state [Ca(2+)](i) measured at 300 s of depolarization was higher in control cells compared with cells in which the ER Ca(2+) pools were depleted. The amount of Ca(2+) presented to the cytoplasm during depolarization as estimated from the integral of the increment in [Ca(2+)](i) over time (integralDelta[Ca(2+)](i).dt) was approximately 30% higher compared with that in the Ca(2+) pool-depleted cells. neo-thapsigargin, an inactive analog, did not affect [Ca(2+)](i) response. Using Sr(2+) in the extracellular medium and exploiting the differences in the fluorescence properties of Ca(2+)- and Sr(2+)-bound fluo-3, we found that the incoming Sr(2+) triggered Ca(2+) release from the ER. Depolarization-induced [Ca(2+)](i) response was not altered by, an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, suggesting that stimulation of the enzyme by Ca(2+) is not essential for amplification of Ca(2+) signaling. [Ca(2+)](i) response was enhanced when cells were depolarized in the presence of 3 mm glucose, forskolin, and caffeine, suggesting involvement of ryanodine receptors in the amplification process. Pretreatment with ryanodine (100 microm) diminished the second phase of the depolarization-induced increase in [Ca(2+)](i). We conclude that Ca(2+) entry through L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels triggers Ca(2+) release from the ER and that such a process amplifies depolarization-induced Ca(2+) signaling in beta-cells.  相似文献   

6.
The concentration of free Ca2+ in the cytoplasm and organelles of individual mouse pancreatic beta-cells was estimated with dual wavelength microfluorometry and the indicators Fura-2 and furaptra. Measuring the increase of cytoplasmic Ca2+ resulting from intracellular mobilization of the ion in ob/ob mouse beta-cells, most organelle calcium (92%) was found in acidic compartments released when combining the Ca2+ ionophore Br-A23187 with a protonophore. Only 3-4% of organelle calcium was recovered from a pool sensitive to the Ca(2+)-ATPase inhibitor thapsigargin. Organelle Ca2+ was also measured directly in furaptra-loaded beta-cells after controlled plasma membrane permeabilization. The permeabilizing agent alpha-toxin was superior to digitonin in preserving the integrity of intracellular membranes, but digitonin provided more reproducible access to intracellular sites. After permeabilization, the thapsigargin-sensitive fraction of Ca2+ detected by furaptra was as high as 90%, suggesting that the indicator essentially measures Ca2+ in endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Both alpha-toxin- and digitonin-permeabilized cells exhibited ATP-dependent uptake of Ca2+ into thapsigargin-sensitive stores with half-maximal and maximal filling at 6-11 microM and 1 mM ATP respectively. Most of the thapsigargin-sensitive Ca2+ was mobilized by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3), whereas caffeine, ryanodine, cyclic ADP ribose and nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate lacked effects both in beta-cells from ob/ob mice and normal NMRI mice. Mobilization of organelle Ca2+ by 4-chloro-3-methylphenol was attributed to interference with the integrity of the ER rather than to activation of ryanodine receptors. The observations emphasize the importance of IP3 for Ca2+ mobilization in pancreatic beta-cells, but question a role for ryanodine receptor agonists.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of tetracaine on 45Ca efflux, cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration [Ca2+]i, and insulin secretion in isolated pancreatic islets and beta-cells was studied. In the absence of external Ca2+, tetracaine (0.1-2.0 mM) increased the 45Ca efflux from isolated islets in a dose-dependentOFF efflux caused by 50 mM K+ or by the association of carbachol (0.2 mM) and 50 mM K+. Tetracaine permanently increased the [Ca2+]i in isolated beta-cells in Ca2+-free medium enriched with 2.8 mM glucose and 25 microM D-600 (methoxiverapamil). This effect was also observed in the presence of 10 mM caffeine or 1 microM thapsigargin. In the presence of 16.7 mM glucose, tetracaine transiently increased the insulin secretion from islets perfused in the absence and presence of external Ca2+. These data indicate that tetracaine mobilises Ca2+ from a thapsigargin-insensitive store and stimulates insulin secretion in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. The increase in 45Ca efflux caused by high concentrations of K+ and by carbachol indicates that tetracaine did not interfere with a cation or inositol triphosphate sensitive Ca2+ pool in beta-cells.  相似文献   

8.
Hormonal and phorbol ester pretreatment of pancreatic acinar cells markedly decreases the Ins(1,4,5)P3-induced release of actively stored Ca2+ [Willems, Van Den Broek, Van Os & De Pont (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9762-9767]. Inhibition occurred at an ambient free Ca2+ concentration of 0.1 microM, suggesting a receptor-mediated increase in Ca2(+)-sensitivity of the Ins(1,4,5)P3-operated Ca2+ channel. To test this hypothesis, the Ca2(+)-dependence of Ins(1,4,5)P3-induced Ca2+ release was investigated. In the presence of 0.2 microM free Ca2+, permeabilized cells accumulated 0.9 nmol of Ca2+/mg of acinar protein in an energy-dependent pool. Uptake into this pool increased 2.2- and 3.3-fold with 1.0 and 2.0 microM free Ca2+ respectively. At 0.2, 1.0 and 2.0 microM free Ca2+, Ins(1,4,5)P3 maximally released 0.53 (56%), 0.90 (44%) and 0.62 (20%) nmol of Ca2+/mg of acinar protein respectively. Corresponding half-maximal stimulatory Ins(1,4,5)P3 concentrations were calculated to be 0.5, 0.6 and 1.4 microM, suggesting that the affinity of Ins(1,4,5)P3 for its receptor decreases beyond 1.0 microM free Ca2+. The possibility that an inhibitory effect of sub-micromolar Ca2+ is being masked by the concomitant increase in size of the releasable store is excluded, since Ca2+ release from cells loaded in the presence of 0.1 or 0.2 microM free Ca2+ and stimulated at higher ambient free Ca2+ was not inhibited below 1.0 microM free Ca2+. At 2.0 and 10.0 microM free Ca2+, Ca2+, Ca2+ release was inhibited by approx. 30% and 75% respectively. The results presented show that hormonal pretreatment does not lead to an increase in Ca2(+)-sensitivity of the release mechanism. Such an increase in Ca2(+)-sensitivity to sub-micromolar Ca2+ is required to explain sub-micromolar oscillatory changes in cytosolic free Ca2+ by a Ca2(+)-dependent negative-feedback mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
Pancreatic beta-cells isolated from obese-hyperglycaemic mice released intracellular Ca2+ in response to carbamoylcholine, an effect dependent on the presence of glucose. The effective Ca2+ concentration reached was sufficient to evoke a transient release of insulin. When the cells were deficient in Ca2+, the Ca2+ pool sensitive to carbamoylcholine stimulation was equivalent to that released by ionomycin. Unlike intact cells, cells permeabilized by high-voltage discharges failed to generate either inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (InsP3) or to release Ca2+ after exposure to carbamoylcholine. However, the permeabilized cells released insulin sigmoidally in response to increasing concentrations of Ca2+. Also in the absence of functional mitochondria these cells exhibited a large ATP-dependent buffering of Ca2+, enabling the maintenance of an ambient Ca2+ concentration corresponding to about 150 nM even after several additional pulses of Ca2+. InsP3, maximally effective at 6 microM, promoted a rapid and pronounced release of Ca2+. The InsP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool was rapidly filled and lost its Ca2+ late after ATP depletion. The transient nature of the Ca2+ signal was not overcome by repetitive additions of InsP3. It was possible to restore the response to InsP3 after a delay of approx. 20 min, an effect which had less latency after the addition of Ca2+. These latter findings argue against degradation and/or desensitization as factors responsible for the transiency in InsP3 response. It is suggested that Ca2+ released by InsP3 is taken up by a part of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) not sensitive to InsP3. On metabolism of InsP3, Ca2+ recycles to the InsP3-sensitive pool, implying that this pool indeed has a very high affinity for the ion. The presence of functional mitochondria did not interfere with the recycling process. The ER in pancreatic beta-cells is of major importance in buffering Ca2+, but InsP3 only modulates Ca2+ transport for a restricted period of time following immediately upon its formation. Thereafter the non-sensitive part of the ER takes over the continuous regulation of Ca2+ cycling.  相似文献   

10.
A key question for understanding the mechanisms of pulsatile insulin release is how the underlying beta-cell oscillations of the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) are synchronized within and among the islets in the pancreas. Nitric oxide has been proposed to coordinate the activity of the beta-cells by precipitating transients of [Ca2+]i. Comparing ob/ob mice and lean controls, we have now studied the action of carbon monoxide (CO), another neurotransmitter with stimulatory effects on cGMP production. A strong immunoreactivity for the CO-producing constitutive heme oxygenase (HO-2) was found in ganglionic cells located in the periphery of the islets and in almost all islet endocrine cells. Islets from ob/ob mice had sixfold higher generation of CO (1 nmol.min-1.mg protein-1) than the lean controls. This is 100-fold the rate for their constitutive production of NO. Moreover, islets from ob/ob mice showed a threefold increase in HO-2 expression and expressed inducible HO (HO-1). The presence of an excessive islet production of CO in the ob/ob mouse had its counterpart in a pronounced suppression of the glucose-stimulated insulin release from islets exposed to the HO inhibitor Zn-protoporhyrin (10 microM) and in a 16 times higher frequency of [Ca2+]i transients in their beta-cells. Hemin (0.1 and 1.0 microM), the natural substrate for HO, promoted the appearance of [Ca2+]i transients, and 10 microM of the HO inhibitors Zn-protoporphyrin and Cr-mesoporphyrin had a suppressive action both on the firing of transients and their synchronization. It is concluded that the increased islet production of CO contributes to the hyperinsulinemia in ob/ob mice. In addition to serving as a positive modulator of glucose-stimulated insulin release, CO acts as a messenger propagating Ca2+ signals with coordinating effects on the beta-cell rhythmicity.  相似文献   

11.
Recent studies on the role of nitric oxide (NO) ingastrointestinal smooth muscle have raised the possibility thatNO-stimulated cGMP could, in the absence of cGMP-dependent proteinkinase (PKG) activity, act as aCa2+-mobilizing messenger[K. S. Murthy, K.-M. Zhang, J.-G. Jin, J. T. Grider, and G. M. Makhlouf. Am. J. Physiol. 265 (Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 28):G660-G671, 1993]. This notion was examined indispersed gastric smooth muscle cells with 8-bromo-cGMP (8-BrcGMP) andwith NO and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), which stimulate endogenous cGMP. In muscle cells treated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and PKG inhibitors (H-89 and KT-5823), 8-BrcGMP (10 µM),NO (1 µM), and VIP (1 µM) stimulated45Ca2+release (21 ± 3 to 30 ± 1% decrease in45Ca2+cell content); Ca2+ releasestimulated by 8-BrcGMP was concentration dependent with anEC50 of 0.4 ± 0.1 µM and athreshold of 10 nM. 8-BrcGMP and NO increased cytosolic freeCa2+ concentration([Ca2+]i)and induced contraction; both responses were abolished after Ca2+ stores were depleted withthapsigargin. With VIP, which normally increases[Ca2+]iby stimulating Ca2+ influx,treatment with PKA and PKG inhibitors caused a further increase in[Ca2+]ithat reverted to control levels in cells pretreated with thapsigargin. Neither Ca2+ release norcontraction induced by cGMP and NO in permeabilized muscle cells wasaffected by heparin or ruthenium red.Ca2+ release induced by maximallyeffective concentrations of cGMP and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate(IP3) was additive, independent of which agent was applied first. We conclude that, in the absence ofPKA and PKG activity, cGMP stimulatesCa2+ release from anIP3-insensitive store and that itseffect is additive to that of IP3.

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12.
Hypotonicswelling increases the intracellular Ca2+ concentration([Ca2+]i) in vascular smooth muscle cells(VSMC). The source of this Ca2+ is not clear. To study thesource of increase in [Ca2+]i in response tohypotonic swelling, we measured [Ca2+]i infura 2-loaded cultured VSMC (A7r5 cells). Hypotonic swelling produced a40.7-nM increase in [Ca2+]i that was notinhibited by EGTA but was inhibited by 1 µM thapsigargin. Priordepletion of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-sensitive Ca2+ stores with vasopressin did not inhibit the increasein [Ca2+]i in response to hypotonic swelling.Exposure of 45Ca2+-loaded intracellular storesto hypotonic swelling in permeabilized VSMC produced an increase in45Ca2+ efflux, which was inhibited by 1 µMthapsigargin but not by 50 µg/ml heparin, 50 µM ruthenium red, or25 µM thio-NADP. Thus hypotonic swelling of VSMC causes a release ofCa2+ from the intracellular stores from a novel sitedistinct from the IP3-, ryanodine-, and nicotinic acidadenine dinucleotide phosphate-sensitive stores.

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13.
We have previously shown that inositol trisphosphate (IP3) releases Ca2+ from a nonmitochondrial pool of permeabilized rat pancreatic acinar cells (Streb, H., Irvine, R. F., Berridge, M. J., and Schulz, I. (1984) Nature 306, 67-69). This pool was later identified as endoplasmic reticulum (Streb, H., Bayerdorffer, E., Haase, W., Irvine, R. F., and Schulz, I. (1984) J. Membr. Biol. 81, 241-253). As IP3 is produced by hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate on activation of many "Ca2+-mobilizing receptors," our observation supported the proposal that IP3 functions as a second messenger to release Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum. We have here used the same preparation of permeabilized acinar cells to study the relationship of secretagogue-induced Ca2+ release and IP3 production. We show that: 1) secretagogue-induced Ca2+ release in permeabilized cells is accompanied by a parallel production of inositol trisphosphate. 2) When the secretagogue-induced increase in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration was abolished by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid buffering, secretagogue-induced IP3 production was unimpaired. 3) When secretagogue-induced IP3 production was reduced by inhibiting phospholipase C with neomycin, secretagogue-induced Ca2+ release was also abolished. 4) When the IP3 breakdown was reduced either by lowering the free Mg2+ concentration of the incubation medium or by adding 2.3-diphosphoglyceric acid, the rise in IP3 and the release of Ca2+ induced by secretagogues were both increased. These results further support the role of IP3 as a second messenger to induce Ca2+ mobilization.  相似文献   

14.
We have examined the effect of the Ca2+ (Mg2+)-ATPase inhibitors thapsigargin (TG) and vanadate on ATP-dependent 45Ca2+ uptake into IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pools in isolated microsomes from rat pancreatic acinar cells. The inhibitory effect of TG was biphasic. About 40–50% of total Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by TG up to 10 nm (apparent Ki4.2 nm, Ca2+ pool I). An additional increase of inhibition up to 85–90% of total Ca2+ uptake could be achieved at 15 to 20 nm of TG (apparent Ki12.1 nm, Ca2+ pool II). The rest was due to TG-insensitive contaminating plasma membranes and could be inhibited by vanadate (apparent Ki10 m). In the absence of TG, increasing concentrations of vanadate also showed two phases of inhibition of microsomal Ca2+ uptake. About 30–40% of total Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by 100 m of vanadate (apparent Ki18 m, Ca2+ pool II). The remaining 60–70% could be inhibited either by vanadate at concentrations up to 1 mm (apparent Ki300 m) or by TG up to 10 nm (Ca2+ pool I). The amount of IP3-induced Ca2+ release was constant at 25% over a wide range of Ca2+ filling. About 10–20% remained unreleasable by IP3. Reduction of IP3 releasable Ca2+ in the presence of inhibitors showed similar dose-response curves as Ca2+ uptake (apparent Ki 3.0 nm for IP3-induced Ca2+ release as compared to 4.2 nm for Ca2+ uptake at TG up to 10 nm) indicating that the highly TG-sensitive Ca2+ pump fills the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool I. At TG concentrations >10 nm which blocked Ca2+ pool II the apparent Ki values were 11.3 and 12.1 nm, respectively. For inhibition by vanadate up to 100 m the apparent Ki values were 18 m for Ca2+ uptake and 7 m for Ca2+ release (Ca2+ pool II). At vanadate concentrations up to 1 mm the apparent Ki values were 300 and 200 m, respectively (Ca2+ pool I). Both Ca2+ pools I and II also showed different sensitivities to IP3. Dose-response curves for IP3 in the absence of inhibitors (control) showed an apparent Km value for IP3 at 0.6 m. In the presence of TG (inhibition of Ca2+ pool I) the curve was shifted to the left with an apparent Km for IP3 at 0.08 m. In the presence of vanadate (inhibition of Ca2+ pool II), the apparent Km for IP3 was 2.1 m. These data allow the conclusion that there are at least three different Ca2+ uptake mechanisms present in pancreatic acinar cells: TG- and IP3 insensitive but highly vanadate-sensitive Ca2+ uptake occurs into membrane vesicles derived from plasma membranes. Two Ca2+ pools with different TG-, vanadate- and IP3-sensitivities are most likely located in the endoplasmic reticulum at different cell sites, which could have functional implications for hormonal stimulation of pancreatic acinar cells.This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Sonderforschungsbereich 246. The authors wish to thank Dr. KlausDieter Preuß for valuable discussions and Mrs. Gabriele Mörschbächer for excellent secretarial help.  相似文献   

15.
Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (Ins (1,4,5)P3)-stimulated Ca2+ release is inhibited by low concentrations of heparin (IC50 = 4.5 micrograms/ml). GTP-stimulated Ca2+ release is unaffected at a heparin concentration of 16 micrograms/ml. Addition of heparin after Ins (1,4,5)P3 causes the rapid re-uptake of Ins (1,4,5)P3-releasable Ca2+.  相似文献   

16.
Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) occurs in smooth muscle as spontaneous SR Ca(2+) release or Ca(2+) sparks and, in some spiking tissues, as Ca(2+) release that is triggered by the activation of sarcolemmal Ca(2+) channels. Both processes display spatial localization in that release occurs at a higher frequency at specific subcellular regions. We have used two-photon flash photolysis (TPFP) of caged Ca(2+) (DMNP-EDTA) in Fluo-4-loaded urinary bladder smooth muscle cells to determine the extent to which spatially localized increases in Ca(2+) activate SR release and to further understand the molecular and biophysical processes underlying CICR. TPFP resulted in localized Ca(2+) release in the form of Ca(2+) sparks and Ca(2+) waves that were distinguishable from increases in Ca(2+) associated with Ca(2+) uncaging, unequivocally demonstrating that Ca(2+) release occurs subsequent to a localized rise in [Ca(2+)](i). TPFP-triggered Ca(2+) release was not constrained to a few discharge regions but could be activated at all areas of the cell, with release usually occurring at or within several microns of the site of photolysis. As expected, the process of CICR was dominated by ryanodine receptor (RYR) activity, as ryanodine abolished individual Ca(2+) sparks and evoked release with different threshold and kinetics in FKBP12.6-null cells. However, TPFP CICR was not completely inhibited by ryanodine; Ca(2+) release with distinct kinetic features occurred with a higher TPFP threshold in the presence of ryanodine. This high threshold release was blocked by xestospongin C, and the pharmacological sensitivity and kinetics were consistent with CICR release at high local [Ca(2+)](i) through inositol trisphosphate (InsP(3)) receptors (InsP(3)Rs). We conclude that CICR activated by localized Ca(2+) release bears essential similarities to those observed by the activation of I(Ca) (i.e., major dependence on the type 2 RYR), that the release is not spatially constrained to a few specific subcellular regions, and that Ca(2+) release through InsP(3)R can occur at high local [Ca(2+)](i).  相似文献   

17.
During perifusion with medium deprived of Ca2+, addition of glucose or omission of Na+ resulted in prompt and quantitatively similar inhibitions of 45Ca efflux from beta-cell rich pancreatic islets microdissected from ob/ob mice. Glucose had no additional inhibitory effect when Na+ was isoosmotically replaced by sucrose or choline+. When K+ was used as a substitute for Na+, the inhibitory effect of Na+ removal on 45Ca efflux became additive to that of glucose. The observation that glucose can be equally effective in inhibiting 45Ca efflux in the presence or absence of Na+ is difficult to reconcile with the postulate that the Na+-Ca2+ countertransport mechanism is a primary site of action for glucose.  相似文献   

18.
Respiring rat liver mitochondria are known to spontaneously release the Ca2+ taken up when they have accumulated Ca2+ over a certain threshold, while Sr2+ and Mn2+ are well tolerated and retained. We have studied the interaction of Sr2+ with Ca2+ release. When Sr2+ was added to respiring mitochondria simultaneously with or soon after the addition of Ca2+, the release was potently inhibited or reversed. On the other hand, when Sr2+ was added before Ca2+, the release was stimulated. Ca2+-induced mitochondrial damage and release of accumulated Ca2+ is generally believed to be due to activation of mitochondrial phospholipase A (EC 3.1.1.4.) by Ca2+. However, isolated mitochondrial phospholipase A activity was little if at all inhibited by Sr2+. The Ca2+ -release may thus be triggered by some Ca2+ -dependent function other than phospholipase.  相似文献   

19.
Skeletal muscle deficiency in the 3-phosphoinositide (PtdInsP) phosphatase myotubularin (MTM1) causes myotubular myopathy which is associated with severe depression of voltage-activated sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release through ryanodine receptors. In the present study we aimed at further understanding how Ca2+ release is altered in MTM1-deficient muscle fibers, at rest and during activation. While in wild-type muscle fibers, SR Ca2+ release exhibits fast stereotyped kinetics of activation and decay throughout the voltage range of activation, Ca2+ release in MTM1-deficient muscle fibers exhibits slow and unconventional kinetics at intermediate voltages, suggestive of partial loss of the normal control of ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channel activity. In addition, the diseased muscle fibers at rest exhibit spontaneous elementary Ca2+ release events at a frequency 30 times greater than that of control fibers. Eighty percent of the events have spatiotemporal properties of archetypal Ca2+ sparks while the rest take either the form of lower amplitude, longer duration Ca2+ release events or of a combination thereof. The events occur at preferred locations in the fibers, indicating spatially uneven distribution of the parameters determining spontaneous ryanodine receptor 1 opening. Spatially large Ca2+ release sources were obviously involved in some of these events, suggesting that opening of ryanodine receptors in one cluster can activate opening of ryanodine receptors in a neighboring one. Overall results demonstrate that opening of Ca2+-activated ryanodine receptors is promoted both at rest and during excitation-contraction coupling in MTM1-deficient muscle fibers. Because access to this activation mode is denied to ryanodine receptors in healthy skeletal muscle, this may play an important role in the associated disease situation.  相似文献   

20.
Neoplastic rat liver epithelial (261B) cells made permeable by electroporation released 0.2-0.3 microM Ca2+ from intracellular stores in response to 0.5 microM Ins(1,4,5)P3 stimulation. This Ca2+ release response was found to be inhibited by heparin in a dose-dependent manner (Ki of 15 micrograms/ml). Two other glycosaminoglycans, chondroitin sulfate and hyaluronic acid, showed no inhibitory effect at doses as high as 0.2 mg/ml. Passive Ca2+ release, and sequestration of Ca2+ into intracellular storage sites by the action of Ca2+-ATPase were unaffected by heparin treatment. We conclude that the inhibitory action of heparin treatment on Ca2+ mobilization in permeabilized 261B cells is mediated through its interaction at the Ins(1,4,5)P3 receptor binding site.  相似文献   

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