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1.
Ca(2+) sparks are highly localized cytosolic Ca(2+) transients caused by a release of Ca(2+) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum via ryanodine receptors (RyRs); they are the elementary events underlying global changes in Ca(2+) in skeletal and cardiac muscle. In smooth muscle and some neurons, Ca(2+) sparks activate large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (BK channels) in the spark microdomain, causing spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs) that regulate membrane potential and, hence, voltage-gated channels. Using the fluorescent Ca(2+) indicator fluo-3 and a high speed widefield digital imaging system, it was possible to capture the total increase in fluorescence (i.e., the signal mass) during a spark in smooth muscle cells, which is the first time such a direct approach has been used in any system. The signal mass is proportional to the total quantity of Ca(2+) released into the cytosol, and its rate of rise is proportional to the Ca(2+) current flowing through the RyRs during a spark (I(Ca(spark))). Thus, Ca(2+) currents through RyRs can be monitored inside the cell under physiological conditions. Since the magnitude of I(Ca(spark)) in different sparks varies more than fivefold, Ca(2+) sparks appear to be caused by the concerted opening of a number of RyRs. Sparks with the same underlying Ca(2+) current cause STOCs, whose amplitudes vary more than threefold, a finding that is best explained by variability in coupling ratio (i.e., the ratio of RyRs to BK channels in the spark microdomain). The time course of STOC decay is approximated by a single exponential that is independent of the magnitude of signal mass and has a time constant close to the value of the mean open time of the BK channels, suggesting that STOC decay reflects BK channel kinetics, rather than the time course of [Ca(2+)] decline at the membrane. Computer simulations were carried out to determine the spatiotemporal distribution of the Ca(2+) concentration resulting from the measured range of I(Ca(spark)). At the onset of a spark, the Ca(2+) concentration within 200 nm of the release site reaches a plateau or exceeds the [Ca(2+)](EC50) for the BK channels rapidly in comparison to the rate of rise of STOCs. These findings suggest a model in which the BK channels lie close to the release site and are exposed to a saturating [Ca(2+)] with the rise and fall of the STOCs determined by BK channel kinetics. The mechanism of signaling between RyRs and BK channels may provide a model for Ca(2+) action on a variety of molecular targets within cellular microdomains.  相似文献   

2.
L-type Ca(2+) channel (L-channel) activity of the skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor is markedly enhanced by the skeletal muscle isoform of the ryanodine receptor (RyR1) (Nakai, J., R.T. Dirksen, H. T. Nguyen, I.N. Pessah, K.G. Beam, and P.D. Allen. 1996. Nature. 380:72-75.). However, the dependence of the biophysical and pharmacological properties of skeletal L-current on RyR1 has yet to be fully elucidated. Thus, we have evaluated the influence of RyR1 on the properties of macroscopic L-currents and intracellular charge movements in cultured skeletal myotubes derived from normal and "RyR1-knockout" (dyspedic) mice. Compared with normal myotubes, dyspedic myotubes exhibited a 40% reduction in the amount of maximal immobilization-resistant charge movement (Q(max), 7.5 +/- 0.8 and 4.5 +/- 0.4 nC/muF for normal and dyspedic myotubes, respectively) and an approximately fivefold reduction in the ratio of maximal L-channel conductance to charge movement (G(max)/Q(max)). Thus, RyR1 enhances both the expression level and Ca(2+) conducting activity of the skeletal L-channel. For both normal and dyspedic myotubes, the sum of two exponentials was required to fit L-current activation and resulted in extraction of the amplitudes (A(fast) and A(slow)) and time constants (tau(slow) and tau(fast)) for each component of the macroscopic current. In spite of a >10-fold in difference current density, L-currents in normal and dyspedic myotubes exhibited similar relative contributions of fast and slow components (at +40 mV; A(fast)/[A(fast) + A(slow)] approximately 0.25). However, both tau(fast) and tau(slow) were significantly (P < 0.02) faster for myotubes lacking the RyR1 protein (tau(fast), 8.5 +/- 1.2 and 4.4 +/- 0.5 ms; tau(slow), 79.5 +/- 10.5 and 34.6 +/- 3.7 ms at +40 mV for normal and dyspedic myotubes, respectively). In both normal and dyspedic myotubes, (-) Bay K 8644 (5 microM) caused a hyperpolarizing shift (approximately 10 mV) in the voltage dependence of channel activation and an 80% increase in peak L-current. However, the increase in peak L-current correlated with moderate increases in both A(slow) and A(fast) in normal myotubes, but a large increase in only A(fast) in dyspedic myotubes. Equimolar substitution of Ba(2+) for extracellular Ca(2+) increased both A(fast) and A(slow) in normal myotubes. The identical substitution in dyspedic myotubes failed to significantly alter the magnitude of either A(fast) or A(slow). These results demonstrate that RyR1 influences essential properties of skeletal L-channels (expression level, activation kinetics, modulation by dihydropyridine agonist, and divalent conductance) and supports the notion that RyR1 acts as an important allosteric modulator of the skeletal L-channel, analogous to that of a Ca(2+) channel accessory subunit.  相似文献   

3.
Hayek SM  Zhao J  Bhat M  Xu X  Nagaraj R  Pan Z  Takeshima H  Ma J 《FEBS letters》1999,461(3):157-164
The ryanodine receptor/Ca(2+) release channels from skeletal (RyR1) and cardiac (RyR2) muscle cells exhibit different inactivation profiles by cytosolic Ca(2+). D3 is one of the divergent regions between RyR1 (amino acids (aa) 1872-1923) and RyR2 (aa 1852-1890) and may contain putative binding site(s) for Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation of RyR. To test this possibility, we have deleted the D3 region from RyR1 (DeltaD3-RyR1), residues 1038-3355 from RyR2 (Delta(1038-3355)-RyR2) and inserted the skeletal D3 into Delta(1038-3355)-RyR2 to generate sD3-RyR2. The channels formed by DeltaD3-RyR1 and Delta(1038-3355)-RyR2 are resistant to inactivation by mM [Ca(2+)], whereas the chimeric sD3-RyR2 channel exhibits significant inactivation at mM [Ca(2+)]. The DeltaD3-RyR1 channel retains its sensitivity to activation by caffeine, but is resistant to inactivation by Mg(2+). The data suggest that the skeletal D3 region is involved in the Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of the RyR1 channel.  相似文献   

4.
In skeletal and cardiac muscle, contraction is initiated by the rapid release of Ca2+ ions from the intracellular membrane system, sarcoplasmic reticulum. Rapid-mixing vesicle ion flux and planar lipid bilayer-single-channel measurements have shown that Ca2+ release is mediated by a high-conductance, ligand-gated Ca2+ channel. Using the Ca2+ release-specific probe ryanodine, a 30 S protein complex composed of four polypeptides ofM r 400,000 has been isolated. Reconstitution of the purified skeletal and cardiac muscle 30 S complexes into planar lipid bilayers induced single Ca2+ channel currents with conductance and gating kinetics similar to those of native Ca2+ release channels. Electron microscopy revealed structural similarity with the protein bridges (feet) that span the transverse-tubule-sarcoplasmic reticulum junction. These results suggest that striated muscle contains an intracellular Ca2+ release channel that is identical with the ryanodine receptor and the transverse-tubule-sarcoplasmic reticulum spanning feet structures.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous Ca2+-binding protein that regulates the ryanodine receptors (RyRs) by direct binding. CaM inhibits the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RyR1) and cardiac muscle receptor (RyR2) at >1 microm Ca2+ but activates RyR1 and inhibits RyR2 at <1 microm Ca2+. Here we tested whether CaM regulates RyR2 by binding to a highly conserved site identified previously in RyR1. Deletion of RyR2 amino acid residues 3583-3603 resulted in background [35S]CaM binding levels. In single channel measurements, deletion of the putative CaM binding site eliminated CaM inhibition of RyR2 at Ca2+ concentrations below and above 1 microm. Five RyR2 single or double mutants in the CaM binding region (W3587A, L3591D, F3603A, W3587A/L3591D, L3591D/F3603A) eliminated or greatly reduced [35S]CaM binding and inhibition of single channel activities by CaM depending on the Ca2+ concentration. An RyR2 mutant, which assessed the effects of 4 amino acid residues that differ between RyR1 and RyR2 in or flanking the CaM binding domain, bound [35S]CaM and was inhibited by CaM, essentially identical to wild type (WT)-RyR2. Three RyR1 mutants (W3620A, L3624D, F3636A) showed responses to CaM that differed from corresponding mutations in RyR2. The results indicate that CaM regulates RyR1 and RyR2 by binding to a single, highly conserved CaM binding site and that other RyR type-specific sites are likely responsible for the differential functional regulation of RyR1 and RyR2 by CaM.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+-dependent inhibition of native and isolated ryanodine receptor (RyR) calcium release channels from sheep heart and rabbit skeletal muscle was investigated using the lipid bilayer technique. We found that cytoplasmic Ca2+ inhibited cardiac RyRs with an average K m = 15 mm, skeletal RyRs with K m = 0.7 mm and with Hill coefficients of 2 in both isoforms. This is consistent with measurements of Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) in skinned fibers and with [3H]-ryanodine binding to SR vesicles, but is contrary to previous bilayer studies which were unable to demonstrate Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac RyRs (Chu, Fill, Stefani &; Entman (1993) J. Membrane Biol. 135, 49–59). Ryanodine prevented Ca2+ from inhibiting either cardiac or skeletal RyRs. Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac RyRs appeared to be the most fragile characteristic of channel function, being irreversibly disrupted by 500 mm Cs+, but not by 500 mm K+, in the cis bath or by solublization with the detergent CHAPS. These treatments had no effect on channel regulation by AMP-PNP, caffeine, ryanodine, ruthenium red, or Ca2+-activation. Ca2+-inhibition in skeletal RyRs was retained in the presence of 500 mm Cs+. Our results provide an explanation for previous findings in which cardiac RyRs in bilayers with 250 mm Cs+ in the solutions fail to demonstrate Ca2+-inhibition, while Ca2+-inhibition of Ca2+ release is observed in vesicle studies where K+ is the major cation. A comparison of open and closed probability distributions from individual RyRs suggested that the same gating mechanism mediates Ca2+-inhibition in skeletal RyRs and cardiac RyRs, with different Ca2+ affinities for inhibition. We conclude that differences in the Ca2+-inhibition in cardiac and skeletal channels depends on their Ca2+ binding properties.  相似文献   

7.
Graded or "quantal" Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores has been observed in various cell types following activation of either ryanodine receptors (RyR) or inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (InsP(3)R). The mechanism causing the release of Ca(2+) stores in direct proportion to the strength of stimulation is unresolved. We investigated the properties of quantal Ca(2+) release evoked by activation of RyR in PC12 cells, and in particular whether the sensitivity of RyR to the agonist caffeine was altered by lumenal Ca(2+). Quantal Ca(2+) release was observed in cells stimulated with 1 to 40 mM caffeine, a range of caffeine concentrations giving a >10-fold change in lumenal Ca(2+) content. The Ca(2+) load of the caffeine-sensitive stores was modulated by allowing them to refill for varying times after complete discharge with maximal caffeine, or by depolarizing the cells with K(+) to enhance their normal steady-state loading. The threshold for RyR activation was sensitized approximately 10-fold as the Ca(2+) load increased from a minimal to a maximal loading. In addition, the fraction of Ca(2+) released by low caffeine concentrations increased. Our data suggest that RyR are sensitive to lumenal Ca(2+) over the full range of Ca(2+) loads that can be achieved in an intact PC12 cell, and that changes in RyR sensitivity may be responsible for the termination of Ca(2+) release underlying the quantal effect.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In response to excitation of skeletal muscle fibers, trains of action potentials induce changes in the configuration of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) anchored in the tubular membrane which opens the Ca2+ release channel in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane. The DHPR also functions as a voltage-gated Ca2+ channel that conducts L-type Ca2+ currents routinely recorded in mammalian muscle fibers, which role was debated for more than four decades. Recently, to allow a closer look into the role of DHPR Ca2+ influx in mammalian muscle, a knock-in (ki) mouse model (ncDHPR) carrying mutation N617D (adjacent to domain II selectivity filter E) in the DHPRα1S subunit abolishing Ca2+ permeation through the channel was generated [Dayal et al., 2017]. In the present study, the Mn2+ quenching technique was initially intended to be used on voltage-clamped muscle fibers from this mouse to determine whether Ca2+ influx through a pathway distinct from DHPR may occur to compensate for the absence of DHPR Ca2+ influx. Surprisingly, while N617D DHPR muscle fibers of the ki mouse do not conduct Ca2+, Mn2+ entry and subsequent quenching did occur because Mn2+ was able to permeate and produce L-type currents through N617D DHPR. N617D DHPR was also found to conduct Ba2+ and Ba2+ currents were strongly blocked by external Ca2+. Ba2+ permeation was smaller, current kinetics slower and Ca2+ block more potent than in wild-type DHPR. These results indicate that residue N617 when replaced by the negatively charged residue D is suitably located at entrance of the pore to trap external Ca2+ impeding in this way permeation. Because Ba2+ binds with lower affinity to D, Ba2+ currents occur, but with reduced amplitudes as compared to Ba2+ currents through wild-type channels. We conclude that mutations located outside the selectivity filter influence channel permeation and possibly channel gating in a fully differentiated skeletal muscle environment.  相似文献   

10.
J Nakai  L Gao  L Xu  C Xin  D A Pasek  G Meissner 《FEBS letters》1999,459(2):154-158
Six chimeras of the skeletal muscle (RyR1) and cardiac muscle (RyR2) Ca(2+) release channels (ryanodine receptors) previously used to identify RyR1 dihydropyridine receptor interactions [Nakai et al. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 13403] were expressed in HEK293 cells to assess their Ca(2+) dependence in [(3)H]ryanodine binding and single channel measurements. The results indicate that the C-terminal one-fourth has a major role in Ca(2+) activation and inactivation of RyR1. Further, our results show that replacement of RyR1 regions with corresponding RyR2 regions can result in loss and/or reduction of [(3)H]ryanodine binding affinity while maintaining channel activity.  相似文献   

11.
Single channel properties of cardiac and fast-twitch skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) release channels were compared in a planar bilayer by fusing SR membranes in a Cs+-conducting medium. We found that the pharmacology, Cs+ conductance and selectivity to monovalent and divalent cations of the two channels were similar. The cardiac SR channel exhibited multiple kinetic states. The open and closed lifetimes were not altered from a range of 10–7 to 10–3 M Ca2+, but the proportion of closed and open states shifted to shorter closings and openings, respectively.However, while the single channel activity of the skeletal SR channel was activated and inactivated by micromolar and millimolar Ca2+, respectively, the cardiac SR channel remained activated in the presence of high [Ca2+]. In correlation to these studies, [3H]ryanodine binding by the receptors of the two channel receptors was inhibited by high [Ca2+] in skeletal but not in cardiac membranes in the presence of adenine nucleotides. There is, however, a minor inhibition of [3H]ryanodine binding of cardiac SR at millimolar Ca2+ in the absence of adenine nucleotides.When Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release was examined from preloaded native SR vesicles, the release rates followed a normal biphasic curve, with Ca2+-induced inactivation at high [Ca2+] for both cardiac and skeletal SR. Our data suggest that the molecular basis of regulation of the SR Ca2+ release channel in cardiac and skeletal muscle is different, and that the cardiac SR channel isoform lacks a Ca2+-inactivated site.This work was supported by research grants from the National Institutes of Health HL13870 and AR38970, and the Texas Affiliate of the American Heart Association, 91A-188. M. Fill was the recipient of an NIH fellowship AR01834.  相似文献   

12.
Lamboley CR  Pape PC 《Cell calcium》2011,50(6):530-547
One aim of this article was to determine the resting concentration of free Ca2+ in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of frog cut skeletal muscle fibers ([Ca2+]SR,R) using the calcium absorbance indicator dye tetramethylmurexide (TMX). Another was to determine the ratio of [Ca2+]SR,R to TMX's apparent dissociation constant for Ca2+ (Kapp) in order to establish the capability of monitoring [Ca2+]SR(t) during SR Ca2+ release – a signal needed to determine the Ca2+ permeability of the SR. To reveal the properties of TMX in the SR, the surface membrane was rapidly permeabilized with saponin to rapidly dissipate myoplasmic TMX. Results indicated that the concentration of Ca-free TMX in the SR was 2.8-fold greater than that in the myoplasm apparently due to binding of TMX to sites in the SR. Taking into account that such binding might influence Kapp as well as a dependence of Kapp on TMX concentration, the results indicate an average [Ca2+]SR,R ranging from 0.43 to 1.70 mM. The ratio [Ca2+]SR,R/Kapp averaged 0.256, a relatively low value which should not depend on factors influencing Kapp. As a result, the time course of [Ca2+]SR(t) in response to electrical stimulation is well determined by, and approximately linearly related to, the active TMX absorbance signal.  相似文献   

13.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were preloaded with either 45Ca2+ or unlabeled Ca2+. 45Ca2+ efflux and influx were determined in the presence and absence of acetylphosphate. Phosphorylation of the membrane-bound (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase by [32P]acetylphosphate was also determined. The rate of efflux with acetylphosphate was considerably higher than that without acetylphosphate. When the acetylphosphate concentration was greatly reduced by diluting the reaction mixture after the start of the reaction, the rate of the efflux decreased markedly. These results demonstrate the acceleration of 45Ca2+ efflux by acetylphosphate. This acetylphosphate-induced efflux required external Ca2+. The external Ca2+ concentration giving half-maximum activation of efflux was 3.8 microM. The Ca2+ concentration dependence of the efflux coincided with that of phosphorylation. When the acetylphosphate concentration was varied, the rate of acetylphosphate-induced efflux changed approximately in proportion to the phosphoenzyme concentration. These and other findings show that acetylphosphate-induced 45Ca2+ efflux represents Ca2+-Ca2+ exchange (between the external medium and the internal medium) mediated by the phosphoenzyme and further demonstrate the direct dissociation of Ca2+ from the Ca2+-bound phosphoenzyme to the external medium in Ca2+-Ca2+ exchange.  相似文献   

14.
Replacement of amino acids 4187-4628 in the skeletal muscle Ca(2+) release channel (skeletal ryanodine receptor (RyR1)), including nearly all of divergent region 1 (amino acids 4254-4631), with the corresponding cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) sequence leads to increased sensitivity of channel activation by caffeine and Ca(2+) and to decreased sensitivity of channel inactivation by elevated Ca(2+) (Du, G. G., and MacLennan, D. H. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 26120-26126). In further investigations, this region was subdivided by the construction of new chimeras, and alterations in channel function were detected by measurement of the caffeine dependence of in vivo Ca(2+) release and the Ca(2+) dependence of [(3)H]ryanodine binding. Chimera RF10a (amino acids 4187-4381) had a lower EC(50) value for activation by caffeine, and RF10c (4557-4628) had a higher EC(50) value, whereas the EC(50) value for chimera RF10b (4382-4556) was unchanged. Chimeras RF10b and RF10c were more sensitive to activation by Ca(2+), whereas RF10a was less sensitive to inactivation by Ca(2+), implicating RF10b and RF10c in Ca(2+) activation and RF10a in Ca(2+) inactivation. Deletion of much of divergent region 1 sequence to create mutant Delta4274-4535 led to higher caffeine and Ca(2+) sensitivity of channel activation and to lower Ca(2+) sensitivity for inactivation. Thus, deletion results demonstrate that caffeine, Ca(2+), and ryanodine binding sites are not located in amino acids 4274-4535. Nevertheless, the properties of the deletion and chimeric mutants demonstrate that amino acids 4274-4535 and three shorter sequences in this region (F10a, amino acids 4187-4381; F10b, 4382-4556; and F10c, 4557-4628) in RyR1 modulate Ca(2+) and caffeine sensitivity of the Ca(2+) release channel.  相似文献   

15.
Activation of some lipoxygenases (LOX) is found to be related to the selective membrane binding upon cell stimulation. In this study, a systematic analysis of the effect of the lipid composition on the membrane binding efficiency, Ca(2+) affinity, and enzymatic activity of 11R-LOX was performed. The analysis of the membrane targeting by fluorometric and surface plasmon resonance measurements in the absence of Ca(2+) showed an exclusive binding of 11R-LOX to the anionic phospholipids (phosphatidylinositol < phosphatidylglycerol ≈ phosphatidylserine) containing model membranes. The presence of Ca(2+) enhanced the rate of interaction and influenced its mode. The modulation of the activity of 11R-LOX indicated that (i) Ca(2+) binding is a prerequisite for productive membrane association, (ii) the reaction of 11R-LOX with arachidonic acid coincided with and was driven by its Ca(2+)-mediated membrane association, and (iii) phosphatidylethanolamine and anionic phospholipids had a synergistic effect on the Ca(2+) affinity, in line with a target-activated messenger affinity mechanism [Corbin, J. A., et al. (2007) Biochemistry 46, 4322-4336]. According to the mechanism proposed in this report, 11R-LOX can bind to the membranes in two different modes and the efficiency of productive membrane binding is determined by a concerted association of Ca(2+) and lipid headgroups.  相似文献   

16.
Ca2+-entry via L-type Ca2+ channels (DHPR) is known to trigger ryanodine receptor (RyR)-mediated Ca2+-release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). The mechanism that terminates SR Ca2+ release is still unknown. Previous reports showed evidence of Ca2+-entry independent inhibition of Ca2+ sparks by DHPR in cardiomyocytes. A peptide from the DHPR loop II-III (PepA) was reported to modulate isolated RyRs. We found that PepA induced voltage-dependent “flicker block” and transition to substates of fully-activated cardiac RyRs in planar bilayers. Substates had less voltage-dependence than block and did not represent occupancy of a ryanoid site. However, ryanoids stabilized PepA-induced events while PepA increased RyR2 affinity for ryanodol, which suggests cooperative interactions. Ryanodol stabilized Imperatoxin A (IpTxA) binding but when IpTxA bound first, it prevented ryanodol binding. Moreover, IpTxA and PepA excluded each other from their sites. This suggests that IpTxA generates a vestibular gate (either sterically or allosterically) that prevents access to the peptides and ryanodol binding sites. Inactivating gate moieties (“ball peptides”) from K+ and Na+ channels (ShakerB and KIFMK, respectively) induced well resolved slow block and substates, which were sensitive to ryanoids and IpTxA and allowed, by comparison, better understanding of PepA action. The RyR2 appears to interact with PepA or ball peptides through a two-step mechanism, reminiscent of the inactivation of voltage-gated channels, which includes binding to outer (substates) and inner (block) vestibular regions in the channel conduction pathway. Our results open the possibility that “ball peptide-like” moieties in RyR2-interacting proteins could modulate SR Ca2+ release in cells.  相似文献   

17.
Testosterone is a potent inhibitor of L-type Ca(2+) channels   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Testosterone administration is beneficial in alleviating myocardial ischaemia in men with significant coronary artery disease (CAD), a condition which is associated with hypotestosteronaemia. Infusion of physiological concentrations of testosterone into coronary arteries at angiography results in rapid vasodilatation in patients with CAD. Whilst the cardiovascular benefits of testosterone have long been documented, the underlying mechanism(s) have not yet been revealed. Here, we have investigated whether testosterone might act like widely prescribed antihypertensive dihydropyridines, as an endogenous Ca(2+) channel antagonist. To do this, we used the whole-cell patch-clamp technique to record Ca(2+) currents from the A7r5 smooth muscle cell line and HEK 293 cells stably expressing either L- or T-type Ca(2+) channels. We demonstrate that testosterone directly inhibited both native and human recombinant vascular L-type Ca(2+) channels in a manner that was voltage-independent and, crucially, displayed an IC(50) value of 38 nM, a value within the physiological range. At higher (supraphysiological) concentrations both native and human recombinant T-type channels were also inhibited by testosterone. Our data indicate that testosterone acts like widely prescribed antihypertensive dihydropyridines to reduce Ca(2+) influx into vascular smooth muscle and so promote vasodilation. This effect is likely to account for its beneficial cardiovascular actions.  相似文献   

18.
Plasma membrane repair is mediated by Ca(2+)-regulated exocytosis of lysosomes   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Reddy A  Caler EV  Andrews NW 《Cell》2001,106(2):157-169
Plasma membrane wounds are repaired by a mechanism involving Ca(2+)-regulated exocytosis. Elevation in intracellular [Ca(2+)] triggers fusion of lysosomes with the plasma membrane, a process regulated by the lysosomal synaptotagmin isoform Syt VII. Here, we show that Ca(2+)-regulated exocytosis of lysosomes is required for the repair of plasma membrane disruptions. Lysosomal exocytosis and membrane resealing are inhibited by the recombinant Syt VII C(2)A domain or anti-Syt VII C(2)A antibodies, or by antibodies against the cytosolic domain of Lamp-1, which specifically aggregate lysosomes. We further demonstrate that lysosomal exocytosis mediates the resealing of primary skin fibroblasts wounded during the contraction of collagen matrices. These findings reveal a fundamental, novel role for lysosomes: as Ca(2+)-regulated exocytic compartments responsible for plasma membrane repair.  相似文献   

19.
Localized distribution of malignant hyperthermia (MH) and central core disease (CCD) mutations in N-terminal and central domains of the ryanodine receptor suggests that the interaction between these domains may be involved in Ca(2+) channel regulation. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effects of a new synthetic domain peptide DP4 corresponding to the Leu(2442)-Pro(2477) region of the central domain. DP4 enhanced ryanodine binding and induced a rapid Ca(2+) release. The concentration for half-maximal activation by agonists was considerably reduced in the presence of DP4. These effects of DP4 are analogous to the functional modifications of the ryanodine receptor caused by MH/CCD mutations (viz. hyperactivation of the channel and hypersensitization of the channel to agonists). Replacement of Arg of DP4 with Cys, mimicking the in vivo Arg(2458)-to-Cys(2458) mutation, abolished the activating effects of DP4. An N-terminal domain peptide DP1 (El-Hayek, R., Saiki, Y., Yamamoto, T., and Ikemoto, N. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 33341-33347) shows similar activation/sensitization effects. The addition of both DP4 and DP1 produced mutual interference of their activating functions. We tentatively propose that contact between the two (N-terminal and central) domains closes the channel, whereas removal of the contact by these domain peptides or by MH/CCD mutations de-blocks the channel, resulting in hyperactivation/hyper-sensitization effects.  相似文献   

20.
Activation of the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) by Ca(2)+ is an essential step in excitation-contraction coupling in heart muscle. However, little is known about the molecular basis of activation of RyR2 by Ca(2)+. In this study, we investigated the role in Ca(2)+ sensing of the conserved glutamate 3987 located in the predicted transmembrane segment M2 of the mouse RyR2. Single point mutation of this conserved glutamate to alanine (E3987A) reduced markedly the sensitivity of the channel to activation by Ca(2)+, as measured by using single-channel recordings in planar lipid bilayers and by [(3)H]ryanodine binding assay. However, this mutation did not alter the affinity of [(3)H]ryanodine binding and the single-channel conductance. In addition, the E3987A mutant channel was activated by caffeine and ATP, was inhibited by Mg(2)+, and was modified by ryanodine in a fashion similar to that of the wild-type channel. Coexpression of the wild-type and mutant E3987A RyR2 proteins in HEK293 cells produced individual single channels with intermediate sensitivities to activating Ca(2)+. These results are consistent with the view that glutamate 3987 is a major determinant of Ca(2)+ sensitivity to activation of the mouse RyR2 channel, and that Ca(2)+ sensing by RyR2 involves the cooperative action between ryanodine receptor monomers. The results of this study also provide initial insights into the structural and functional properties of the mouse RyR2, which should be useful for studying RyR2 function and regulation in genetically modified mouse models.  相似文献   

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