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1.
To elucidate the mechnism by which quercetin enhances the rate of tension development in skinned muscle fibers, effects on calcium release from longitudinal tubule-derived SR (LSR) after phosphate-supported calcium uptake were examined. In all studies, 100 μM quercetin (which inhibits initial calcium uptake velocity 85%) was added at or shortly after the time calcium content reached a maximum at various extravesicular Ca2+ concentrations (Cao). At moderate Cao (0.2–1.0 μM). where spontaneous calcium release rate depended on Cao, quercetin caused a marked stimulation of calcium release. This was accompanied by a 60% reduction in calcium influx and a 30-fold increase in calcium efflux. Thus, the previously reported quercetin-induced increase in the rate of tension development by skinned muscle fibers may result, at least in part, from sensitization of Ca2+-triggered calcium release to lower Cao.  相似文献   

2.
The active uptake and efflux of Ca2+ from suspensions of vesicles from heavy rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum have been examined using the antipyrylazo III dye method in the presence of various nucleotide triphosphate substrates to support active Ca2+ accumulation. On addition of ATP, Ca2+ is rapidly accumulated and maintained at high internal concentrations until the substrate for pump protein is exhausted. Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release which is inhibited by ruthenium red can be demonstrated. The kinetics of Ca2+ release via these channels is different from the Ca2+ efflux observed after substrate exhaustion. This rate was found to be dependent on the type of nucleotide triphosphate, decreasing in the order ATP greater than GTP greater than CTP greater than ITP UTP. It is suggested that different conformations of the Ca2+ pump protein induced by the different substrates may result in the creation of pathways for the facilitated diffusion of Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
To obtain a comprehensive understanding of proteins involved in excitation–contraction coupling, a catalog of proteins from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane fractions of New Zealand white rabbit skeletal muscle was analyzed by an optimized shotgun proteomic method. Light and heavy SR membrane fractions were obtained by nonlinear sucrose gradient centrifugation and separated by 1DE followed by a highly reproducible, automated LC‐MS/MS on the hybrid linear ion trap (LTQ) Orbitrap mass spectrometer. By integrating as low as 1% false discovery rate as one of the features for quality control method, 483 proteins were identified from both of the two independent SR preparations. Proteins involved in calcium release unit complex, including ryanodine receptor 1, dihydropyridine receptor, calmodulin, triadin, junctin, and calsequestrin, were all detected, which offered validation for this protein identification method. Rigorous bioinformatics analysis was performed. Protein pI value, molecular weight range, hydrophobicity index, and transmembrane region were calculated using bioinformatics softwares. Eighty‐three proteins were classified as hydrophobic proteins and 175 proteins were recognized as membrane proteins. Based on the proteomic analysis results, we found as the first time that not only transverse tubule but also mitochondrion physically connected to SR. The complete mapping of these proteomes may help in the elucidation of the process of excitation–contraction coupling and excitation–metabolism coupling.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium release from isolated heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum of rabbit skeletal muscle by several calmodulin antagonistic drugs was measured spectrophotometrically with arsenazo III and compared with the properties of the caffeine-induced calcium release. Trifluoperazine and W7 (about 500 microM) released all actively accumulated calcium (half-maximum release at 129 microM and 98 microM, respectively) in the presence 0.5 mM MgCl2 and 1 mg/ml sarcoplasmic reticulum protein; calmidazolium (100 microM) and compound 48/80 (70 micrograms/ml) released maximally 30-40% calcium, whilst bepridil (100 microM) and felodipin (50 microM) with calmodulin antagonistic strength similar to trifluoperazine (determined by inhibition of the calcium, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum) did not cause a detectable calcium release, indicating that this drug-induced calcium release is not due to the calmodulin antagonistic properties of the tested drugs. Calcium release of trifluoperazine, W7 and compound 48/80 and that of caffeine was inhibited by similar concentrations of magnesium (half-inhibition 1.4-4.2 mM compared with 0.97 mM for caffeine) and ruthenium red (half-inhibition for trifluoperazine, W7 and compound 48/80 was 0.22 microM, 0.08 microM and 0.63 micrograms/ml, respectively, compared with 0.13 microM for caffeine), suggesting that this drug-induced calcium release occurs via the calcium-gated calcium channel of sarcoplasmic reticulum stimulated by caffeine or channels with similar properties.  相似文献   

5.
The anthraquinones, doxorubicin, mitoxantrone, daunorubicin and rubidazone are shown to be potent stimulators of Ca2+ release from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles and to trigger transient contractions in chemically skinned psoas muscle fibers. These effects of anthraquinones are the direct consequence of their specific interaction with the [3H] ryanodine receptor complex, which constitutes the Ca2+ release channel from the triadic junction. In the presence of adenine nucleotides and physiological Mg2+ concentrations (approximately 1.0 mM), channel activation by doxorubicin and daunorubicin exhibits a sharp dependence on submicromolar Ca2+ which is accompanied by a selective, dose-dependent increase in the apparent affinity of the ryanodine binding sites for Ca2+, in a manner similar to that previously reported with caffeine. Unlike caffeine, however, anthraquinones increase [3H]ryanodine receptor occupancy to the level observed in the presence of adenine nucleotides. A strong interaction between the anthraquinone and the caffeine binding sites on the Ca2+ release channel is also observed when monitoring Ca2+ fluxes across the SR. Millimolar caffeine both inhibits anthraquinone-stimulated Ca2+ release, and reduces anthraquinone-stimulated [3H]ryanodine receptor occupancy, without changing the effective binding constant of the anthraquinone for its binding site. The degree of cooperativity for daunorubicin activation of Ca2+ release from SR also increases in the presence of caffeine. These results demonstrate that the mechanism by which anthraquinones stimulate Ca2+ release is caused by a direct interaction with the [3H]ryanodine receptor complex, and by sensitization of the Ca2+ activator site for Ca2+.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium release from sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles presumably derived from longitudinal tubules (LSR) and terminal cisternae (HSR) of rabbit skeletal muscle was investigated by dual wavelength spectrophotometry using the calcium-indicator antipyrylazo III. In 120 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 30 microM, CaCl2, 50 microM MgATP, 100 microM antipyrylazo III, 40 mM histidine (pH 6.8, 25 degrees C), LSR and HSR sequestered approx. 115 nmol calcium/mg, and then spontaneously released calcium. Analysis of ATP hydrolysis and phosphoenzyme level during LSR and HSR calcium sequestration indicated that this calcium release process was passive, occurring in the virtual absence of ATP and phosphoenzyme. Moreover, subsequent addition of ATP reinitiated the calcium sequestration-release sequence. Calcium release by HSR was more than 4-times faster than that by LSR. Analysis of the calcium release phase demonstrated a biexponential decay for both LSR (0.10 and 0.63 min-1) and HSR (0.26 and 1.65 min-1), suggestive of heterogeneity within each fraction. Replacement of 120 mM KCl with either 120 mM choline chloride, 240 mM sucrose, or H2O reduced maximal calcium sequestration by LSR, but had less effect on LSR calcium release rate constants. In the case of HSR, these changes in the ionic composition of the medium drastically reduced calcium release rate constants with little effect on calcium content. These marked differences between LSR and HSR are consistent with the hypothesis that the calcium permeability of the terminal cisternae is greater and more sensitive to the ionic environment than is that of the longitudinal tubules of sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

7.
The photooxidizing xanthene dye rose bengal is shown to induce rapid Ca2+ release from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles. In the presence of light, nanomolar concentrations of rose bengal increase the Ca2+ permeability of the SR and stimulate the production of singlet oxygen (1O2). In the absence of light, no 1O2 production is measured. Under these conditions, higher concentrations of rose bengal (micromolar) are required to stimulate Ca2+ release. Furthermore, removal of oxygen from the release medium results in marked inhibition of the light-dependent reaction rate. Rose bengal-induced Ca2+ release is relatively insensitive to Mg2+. At nanomolar concentrations, rose bengal inhibits [3H]ryanodine binding to its receptor. beta,gamma-Methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate, a nonhydrolyzable analog of ATP, inhibits rose bengal-induced Ca2+ release and prevents rose bengal inhibition of [3H]ryanodine binding. Ethoxyformic anhydride, a histidine modifying reagent, at millimolar concentrations induces Ca2+ release from SR vesicles in a manner similar to that of rose bengal. The molecular mechanism underlying rose bengal modification of the Ca2+ release system of the SR appears to involve a modification of a histidyl residue associated with the Ca2+ release protein from SR. The light-dependent reaction appears to be mediated by singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously demonstrated that H2O2 at millimolar concentrations induces Ca(2+) release from actively loaded sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles and induces biphasic [(3)H]ryanodine binding behavior. Considering that hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a related free radical and has been demonstrated to be a more effective oxidant of proteins, we evaluated the effects of HOCl on sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-channel release mechanism. In a concentration-dependent manner, HOCl activates the SR Ca(2+) release channel and induces rapid release of Ca from actively loaded vesicles. HOCl-induced Ca(2+) release is inhibited in the presence of millimolar concentrations of DMSO. High-affinity [(3)H]ryanodine binding is also enhanced at concentrations from 10 to 100 microM. At HOCl concentrations of >100 microM, equilibrium binding is inhibited. HOCl stimulation of binding is inhibited by the addition of dithiothreitol. The direct interaction between HOCl and the Ca(2+) release mechanism was further demonstrated in single-channel reconstitution experiments. HOCl, at 20 microM, activated the Ca(2+) release channel after fusion of a SR vesicle to a bilayer lipid membrane. At 40 microM, Ca(2+)-channel activity was inhibited. Pretreatment of SR vesicles with HOCl inhibited the fluorescence development of a fluorogenic probe specific to thiol groups critical to channel function. These results suggest that HOCl at micromolar concentrations can modify SR Ca(2+) handling.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release at the terminal cisternae of skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum was demonstrated using heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. Ca2+ release was observed at 10 m Ca2+ in the presence of 1.25mm free Mg2+ and was sensitive to low concentrations of ruthenium red and was partially inhibited by valinomycin. These results suggest that the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release is electrogenic and that an inside negative membrane potential created by the Ca2+ flux opens a second channel that releases Ca2+. Results in support of this formulation were obtained by applying a Cl gradient or K+ gradient to sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles to initiate Ca2+ release. Based on experiments the following hypothesis for the excitation-contraction coupling of skeletal muscle was formulated. On excitation, small amounts of Ca2+ enter from the transverse tubule and interact with a Ca2+ receptor at the terminal cisternae and cause Ca2+ release (Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release). This Ca2+ flux generates an inside negative membrane potential which opens voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (membrane potential-dependent Ca2+ release) in amounts sufficient for contraction.  相似文献   

10.
A fluorescent chelate probe and a Millipore filtration technique have been used to study the effects of β-bungarotoxin (β-toxin) on passive and active Ca++ uptake and ATPase in fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of rabbit skeletal muscle. β-Toxin at 3 × 10?6 M did not affect ATPase activity. In the absence of ATP, β-Toxin increased the passive uptake of Ca++; in the presence of ATP, active Ca++ uptake was inhibited. The effect of β-toxin in SR can be detected at concentrations as low as 10?9 M. The results suggest that β-toxin induces Ca++ leakage in SR membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Skinned fibre experiments were conducted to determine if guanine nucleotide-binding proteins play a role in excitation-contraction coupling of skeletal muscle. By itself, the GTP-gamma S, a non hydrolysable GTP analogue was unable to induce calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, even at concentrations as high as 500 microM. However, calcium- or caffeine-induced calcium releases were enhanced by GTP-gamma S in micromolar concentrations. This response was blocked by GDP-beta S or Pertussis toxin. 32P-ADP-ribosylation catalysed by Pertussis toxin, radiolabelled G-protein alpha subunits in the range of 40 kDa on membrane subcellular fractions of rat skeletal muscle. Using Western blot analysis with antibodies raised against the bovine transducin, G-proteins were identified in frog and rat skeletal muscle subcellular fractions. In most of the muscle fractions (plasma membrane, T-tubules, triads, sarcoplasmic reticulum), the anti-beta subunit antibodies recognized a 36 kDa protein which comigrated with transducin beta subunit. It appears therefore that some of the G-proteins identified by ADP-ribosylation or immunostaining in several subcellular fractions from skeletal muscle, are implicated in the modulation of calcium release from sarcoplasmic reticulum. These results suggest that a Pertussis toxin sensitive G-protein is present at the loci of E-C coupling, and that it serves to regulate the calcium release.  相似文献   

12.
In the course of our study on the function of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) in skeletal muscle, the stimulatory action of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) on the Ca2+ release from SR was demonstrated by using chemically skinned fibers and fragmented SR vesicles. PIP2 induced a tension spike followed by sustained contraction in skinned fibers. PIP2 enhanced the caffeine-induced Ca2+ release from SR vesicles at low concentrations and triggered Ca2+ release by itself at high concentrations. PIP2 also enhanced 45Ca2+ efflux from SR vesicles. However, inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate never produced these effects. The Ca2+-releasing action of PIP2 was only weakly affected by ruthenium red or procaine. These observations suggest that PIP2 activates an SR Ca2+ release channel whose properties are different from those of the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release channel.  相似文献   

13.
Myoplasmic free calcium transients were measured with antipyrylazo III in voltage clamped segments of frog skeletal muscle fibers and were used to calculate the rate of release (Rrel) of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Intramembrane charge movement was measured for the same pulses in the same fibers. During a depolarizing pulse Rrel rose to an early peak and then decayed relatively rapidly but incompletely due to calcium-dependent inactivation (Schneider M.F., and B.J. Simon. 1988. J. Physiol. (Lond.). 405:727-745). Two approaches were used to determine release activation independent of the effects of inactivation: (a) a mathematical correction based on the assumption that inactivation was a process occurring in parallel with and independently of activation; (b) an experimental procedure in which release was maximally inactivated by a large short prepulse and then the remaining noninactivatable component of release was monitored during a subsequent test pulse. Both procedures gave the same time course of activation of release. Release activation paralleled the time course of intramembrane charge movement but was delayed by a few milliseconds.  相似文献   

14.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were shown to possess a class of tightly bound calcium ions, inaccessible to the chelator, ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether) N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid at 0 degrees C or 25 degrees C, amounting to 4.5 nmol/mg of protein (approximately 0.5 mol/mol (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase). The calcium ionophores, A23187 and X537A, induced rapid exchange of tightly bound calcium in the presence of chelator. Chelator alone at 37 degrees C, caused irreversible loss of bound calcium, which correlated with uncoupling of transport from (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase activity. Uncoupling was not accompanied by increased permeability to [14C]inulin. Slow exchange of tightly bound calcium with medium calcium was unaffected by turnover of the ATPase or by tryptic cleavage into 55,000- and 45,000-dalton fragments. Binding studies with labeled calcium suggested that tight binding involves a two-step process: Ca2+ + E in equilibrium K E . Ca2+ leads to E < Ca2+ where E and < Ca2+ represent the ATPase and tightly bound calcium, and K = 1.6 X 10(3) M-1. It is suggested that tightly bound calcium is located in a hydrophobic pocket in, or in close proximity to the ATPase, and, together with tightly bound adenine nucleotides (Aderem, A., McIntosh, D. B., and Berman, M. C. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 76, 3622-03632), is related to the ability of the ATPase to couple hydrolysis of ATP to vectorial transfer of calcium across the membrane.  相似文献   

15.
The modulation of the calcium release channel (CRC) by protein kinases and phosphatases was studied. For this purpose, we have developed a microsyringe applicator to achieve sequential and multiple treatments with highly purified kinases and phosphatases applied directly at the bilayer surface. Terminal cisternae vesicles of sarcoplasmic reticulum from rabbit fast twitch skeletal muscle were fused to planar lipid bilayers, and single-channel currents were measured at zero holding potential, at 0.15 microM free Ca2+, +/- 0.5 mM ATP and +/- 2.6 mM free Mg2+. Sequential dephosphorylation and rephosphorylation rendered the CRC sensitive and insensitive to block by Mg2+, respectively. Channel recovery from Mg2+ block was obtained by exogenous protein kinase A (PKA) or by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CalPK II). Somewhat different characteristics were observed with the two kinases, suggesting two different states of phosphorylation. Channel block by Mg2+ was restored by dephosphorylation using protein phosphatase 1 (PPT1). Before application of protein kinases or phosphatases, channels were found to be "dephosphorylated" (inactive) in 60% and "phosphorylated" (active) in 40% of 51 single-channel experiments based on the criterion of sensitivity to block by Mg2+. Thus, these two states were interconvertable by treatment with exogenously added protein kinases and phosphatases. Endogenous Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (end CalPK) had an opposite action to exogenous CalPK II. Previously, dephosphorylated channels using PPT (Mg2+ absent) were blocked in the closed state by action of endogenous CalPK. This block was removed to normal activity by the action of either PPT or by exogenous CalPK II. Our findings are consistent with a physiological role for phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in the modulation of the calcium release channel of sarcoplasmic reticulum from skeletal muscle. A corollary of our studies is that only the phosphorylated channel is active under physiological conditions (mM Mg2+). Our studies suggest that phosphorylation can be at more than one site and, depending on the site, can have different functional consequences on the CRC.  相似文献   

16.
Release of Ca2+ from skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles was studied by the spectrophotometric stopped-flow technique using tetraphenylboron as a releasing agent. The extent of Ca2+ release shows a sigmoidal response, with respect to the tetraphenylboron concentration, being dependent on Ca2+ preloading and Ca2+-ATPase activity, since these experiments were performed on actively loaded vesicles. The release process has a rapid component with an apparent rate constant of 6-8 s-1, showing a linear relationship between the rapid rate of Ca2+ release and the Ca2+ content of the vesicles. The release is not mediated by the reversal of the Ca2+ pump. Since the amphipathic anion tetraphenylboron was unable to elicit a Ca2+-release response when added to a preparation of sarcoplasmic reticulum phospholipid vesicles, it is suggested that there may be an interaction with some membrane protein(s) at the hydrophobic/hydrophilic interface leading to the opening of some specific Ca2+-release pathway.  相似文献   

17.
The Ca2+-mobilizing metabolite cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) has been shown to release Ca2+ from ryanodine-sensitive stores in many cells. We show that this metabolite at a concentration of 17μM, but not its precursor β-NAD+ nor non-cyclic ADPR at the same concentration, is active in releasing Ca2+ from rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. The release was not sensitive to Ruthenium red (1μM) nor to the ryanodine receptor-specific scorpion toxin Buthotus1-1 (10 μM). In planar bilayer single channel recordings, concentrations up to 50μM cADPR did not increase the open probability of Ruthenium red and toxin-sensitive Ca2+ release channels. Thus Ca2+ release induced by cADPR in skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum may not involve opening of ryanodine receptors.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of gadolinium ions on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium release channel/ryanodine receptor (RyR1) was studied using heavy SR (HSR) vesicles and RyR1 isolated from rabbit fast twitch muscle. In the [(3)H]ryanodine binding assay, 5 microM Gd(3+) increased the K(d) of the [(3)H]ryanodine binding of the vesicles from 33.8 nM to 45.6 nM while B(max), referring to the binding capacity, was not affected significantly. In the presence of 18 nM[(3)H]ryanodine and 100 microM free Ca(2+), Gd(3+) inhibited the binding of the radiolabeled ryanodine with an apparent K(d) value of 14.7 microM and a Hill coefficient of 3.17. In (45)Ca(2+) experiments the time constant of (45)Ca(2+) efflux from HSR vesicles increased from 90.9 (+/- 11.1) ms to 187.7 (+/- 24.9) ms in the presence of 20 microM gadolinium. In single channel experiments gadolinium inhibited the channel activity from both the cytoplasmic (cis) (IC(50) = 5.65 +/- 0.33 microM, n(Hill) = 4.71) and the luminal (trans) side (IC(50) = 5.47 +/- 0.24 microM, n(Hill) = 4.31). The degree of inhibition on the cis side didn't show calcium dependency in the 100 microM to 1 mM Ca(2+) concentration range which indicates no competition with calcium on its regulatory binding sites. When Gd(3+) was applied at the trans side, EGTA was present at the cis side to prevent the binding of Gd(+3) to the cytoplasmic calcium binding regulatory sites of the RyR1 if Gd(3+) accidentally passed through the channel. The inhibition of the channel did not show any voltage dependence, which would be the case if Gd(3+) exerted its effect after getting to the cis side. Our results suggest the presence of inhibitory binding sites for Gd(3+) on both sides of the RyR1 with similar Hill coefficients and IC(50) values.  相似文献   

19.
Thyrotoxicosis in rabbits was induced by prolonged intraperitoneal injection of L-thyroxin. The development of thyroxicosis was assoiated with a decreased Ca2+ accumulation rate by sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fragments and a lowered Ca2+ dependent ATPase activity. As compared to the analogous parameters in normal animals. Ca2+ accumulation rate and ATPase activity of thyrotoxicosis animals decreased by 60 and 25%, respectively. The changes in the specific parameters of SR were also observed during incubation of normal SR samples in the medium containing thyroxin (10-5 M). The changes seen in SR functioning in thyrotoxicosis animals are likely to be related to structural rearrangements of lipoprotein surroundings of Ca-ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
The ryanodine receptor of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was purified as a single 450,000-dalton polypeptide from CHAPS-solubilized triads using immunoaffinity chromatography. The purified receptor had a [3H]ryanodine-binding capacity (Bmax) of 490 pmol/mg and a binding affinity (Kd) of 7.0 nM. Using planar bilayer recording techniques, we show that the purified receptor forms cationic channels selective for divalent ions. Ryanodine receptor channels were identical to the Ca-release channels described in native sarcoplasmic reticulum using the same techniques. In the present work, four criteria were used to establish this identity: (a) activation of channels by micromolar Ca and millimolar ATP and inhibition by micromolar ruthenium red, (b) a main channel conductance of 110 +/- 10 pS in 54 mM trans Ca, (c) a long-term open state of lower unitary conductance induced by ryanodine concentrations as low as 20 nM, and (d) a permeability ratio PCa/PTris approximately equal to 14. In addition, we show that the purified ryanodine receptor channel displays a saturable conductance in both monovalent and divalent cation solutions (gamma max for K and Ca = 1 nS and 172 pS, respectively). In the absence of Ca, channels had a broad selectivity for monovalent cations, but in the presence of Ca, they were selectively permeable to Ca against K by a permeability ratio PCa/PK approximately equal to 6. Receptor channels displayed several equivalent conductance levels, which suggest an oligomeric pore structure. We conclude that the 450,000-dalton polypeptide ryanodine receptor is the Ca-release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum and is the target site of ruthenium red and ryanodine.  相似文献   

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