共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
V. Shoshan-Barmatz S. Weil H. Meyer M. Varsanyi L. M. G. Heilmeyer 《The Journal of membrane biology》1994,142(3):281-288
The association of an endogenous, Ca2+-dependent cysteine-protease with the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is demonstrated. The activity of this protease is strongly stimulated by dithiothreitol (DTT), cysteine and β-mercaptoethanol, and is inhibited by iodoacetamide, mercuric chloride and leupeptin, but not by PMSF. The activity of this thiol-protease is dependent on Ca2+ with half-maximal activity obtained at 0.1 μm and maximal activity at 10 μm. Mg2+ is also an activator of this enzyme (CI50=22 μm). These observations, together with the neutral pH optima and inhibition by the calpain I inhibitor, suggest that this enzyme is of calpain I type. This protease specifically cleaves the ryanodine receptor monomer (510 kD) at one site to produce two fragments with apparent molecular masses of 375 and 150 kD. The proteolytic fragments remain associated as shown by purification of the cleaved ryanodine receptor. The calpain binding site is identified as a PEST (proline, glutamic acid, serine, threonine-rich) region in the amino acid sequence GTPGGTPQPGVE, at positions 1356–1367 of the RyR and the cleavage site, the calmodulin binding site, at residues 1383–1400. The RyR cleavage by the Ca2+-dependent thiol-protease is prevented in the presence of ATP (1–5 mm) and by high NaCl concentrations. This cleavage of the RyR has no effect on ryanodine binding activity but stimulates Ca2+ efflux. A possible involvement of this specific cleavage of the RyR/Ca2+ release channel in the control of calpain activity is discussed. 相似文献
2.
《Molecular membrane biology》2013,30(2):85-93
SummaryIn this work we show that ryanodine binding to junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes or purified ryanodine receptor (RyR) is inhibited in a time — and concentration-dependent fashion by prior treatment with the carboxyl reagent dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). Exposure of the membrane-bound RyR to the water soluble carboxyl reagents 1-ethyl-3 (3-(dimethylamino) propyl carbodiimide (EDC) or N-ethyl-pheny-lisoxazolium-3 -sulfonate (WRK) only slightly affects their ryanodine binding capacity. The amphipathic reagent N-ethoxy cabonyl-2-ethoxy-1, 2-dihydroquinaline (EEDQ) inhibited ryanodine binding at relatively high concentrations. DCCD-modifica-tion of the SR decreased the binding affinities of the RyR for ryanodine and Ca2+ by about 3- and 18-fold, respectively.The single channel activity of SR membranes modified with DCCD and then incorporated into planar lipid bilayers is very low (5–8%) in comparison to control membranes. Application of DCCD to either the myoplasmic (c/s) or luminal (trans) side of the reconstituted unmodified channels resulted in complete inhibition of their single channel activities. Similar results were obtained with the water soluble reagent WRK applied to the myoplasmic, but not to the luminal side. The DCCD-modified non-active channel is re-activated by addition of ryanodine in the presence of 250üM Ca2+ and is stabilized in a sub-conductance state. With caffeine, ryanodine re-activated the channel in the presence of 100üM of Ca2+. The results suggest that a carboxyl residue(s) in the RyR is involved either in the binding of Ca2+, or in conformational changes that are produced by Ca2+ binding, and are required for the binding of ryanodine and the opening of the Ca2+ release channel. 相似文献
3.
Rafael Mejía-Alvarez Claudia Kettlun Eduardo Ríos Michael Stern Michael Fill 《The Journal of general physiology》1999,113(2):177-186
Single canine cardiac ryanodine receptor channels were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Single-channel currents were sampled at 1–5 kHz and filtered at 0.2–1.0 kHz. Channel incorporations were obtained in symmetrical solutions (20 mM HEPES-Tris, pH 7.4, and pCa 5). Unitary Ca2+ currents were monitored when 2–30 mM Ca2+ was added to the lumenal side of the channel. The relationship between the amplitude of unitary Ca2+ current (at 0 mV holding potential) and lumenal [Ca2+] was hyperbolic and saturated at ∼4 pA. This relationship was then defined in the presence of different symmetrical CsCH3SO3 concentrations (5, 50, and 150 mM). Under these conditions, unitary current amplitude was 1.2 ± 0.1, 0.65 ± 0.1, and 0.35 ± 0.1 pA in 2 mM lumenal Ca2+; and 3.3 ± 0.4, 2.4 ± 0.2, and 1.63 ± 0.2 pA in 10 mM lumenal Ca2+ (n > 6). Unitary Ca2+ current was also defined in the presence of symmetrical [Mg2+] (1 mM) and low [Cs+] (5 mM). Under these conditions, unitary Ca2+ current in 2 and 10 mM lumenal Ca2+ was 0.66 ± 0.1 and 1.52 ± 0.06 pA, respectively. In the presence of higher symmetrical [Cs+] (50 mM), Mg2+ (1 mM), and lumenal [Ca2+] (10 mM), unitary Ca2+ current exhibited an amplitude of 0.9 ± 0.2 pA (n = 3). This result indicates that the actions of Cs+ and Mg2+ on unitary Ca2+ current were additive. These data demonstrate that physiological levels of monovalent cation and Mg2+ effectively compete with Ca2+ as charge carrier in cardiac ryanodine receptor channels. If lumenal free Ca2+ is 2 mM, then our results indicate that unitary Ca2+ current under physiological conditions should be <0.6 pA. 相似文献
4.
Interdomain interactions within ryanodine receptors regulate Ca2+ spark frequency in skeletal muscle. 下载免费PDF全文
Alexander Shtifman Christopher W Ward Takeshi Yamamoto Jianli Wang Beth Olbinski Hector H Valdivia Noriaki Ikemoto Martin F Schneider 《The Journal of general physiology》2002,119(1):15-32
DP4 is a 36-residue synthetic peptide that corresponds to the Leu(2442)-Pro(2477) region of RyR1 that contains the reported malignant hyperthermia (MH) mutation site. It has been proposed that DP4 disrupts the normal interdomain interactions that stabilize the closed state of the Ca(2)+ release channel (Yamamoto, T., R. El-Hayek, and N. Ikemoto. 2000. J. Biol. Chem. 275:11618-11625). We have investigated the effects of DP4 on local SR Ca(2)+ release events (Ca(2)+ sparks) in saponin-permeabilized frog skeletal muscle fibers using laser scanning confocal microscopy (line-scan mode, 2 ms/line), as well as the effects of DP4 on frog SR vesicles and frog single RyR Ca(2)+ release channels reconstituted in planar lipid bilayers. DP4 caused a significant increase in Ca(2)+ spark frequency in muscle fibers. However, the mean values of the amplitude, rise time, spatial half width, and temporal half duration of the Ca(2)+ sparks, as well as the distribution of these parameters, remained essentially unchanged in the presence of DP4. Thus, DP4 increased the opening rate, but not the open time of the RyR Ca(2)+ release channel(s) generating the sparks. DP4 also increased [(3)H]ryanodine binding to SR vesicles isolated from frog and mammalian skeletal muscle, and increased the open probability of frog RyR Ca(2)+ release channels reconstituted in bilayers, without changing the amplitude of the current through those channels. However, unlike in Ca(2)+ spark experiments, DP4 produced a pronounced increase in the open time of channels in bilayers. The same peptide with an Arg(17) to Cys(17) replacement (DP4mut), which corresponds to the Arg(2458)-to-Cys(2458) mutation in MH, did not produce a significant effect on RyR activation in muscle fibers, bilayers, or SR vesicles. Mg(2)+ dependence experiments conducted with permeabilized muscle fibers indicate that DP4 preferentially binds to partially Mg(2)+-free RyR(s), thus promoting channel opening and production of Ca(2)+ sparks. 相似文献
5.
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
6.
Gerhard Meissner Eric Rousseau F. Anthony Lai Qi-Yi Liu Kristin A. Anderson 《Molecular and cellular biochemistry》1988,82(1-2):59-65
Summary Rapid mixing-vesicle ion flux and planar lipid bilayer-single channel measurements have shown that a high-conductance, ligand-gated Ca2+ release channel is present in heavy, junctional-derived membrane fractions of skeletal and cardiac muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. Using the release channel-specific probe, ryanodine, a 30S protein complex composed of polypeptides of Mr 400 000 has been isolated from cardiac and skeletal muscle. Reconstitution of the complex into planar lipid bilayers has revealed a Ca2+ conductance with properties characteristic of the native Ca2+ release channel. 相似文献
7.
D. R. Laver L. D. Roden G. P. Ahern K. R. Eager P. R. Junankar A. F. Dulhunty 《The Journal of membrane biology》1995,147(1):7-22
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
8.
Much recent progress has been made in our understanding of the mechanism of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release in skeletal muscle. Vertebrate skeletal muscle excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling is thought to occur by a mechanical coupling mechanism involving protein-protein interactions that lead to activation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) ryanodine receptor (RyR)/Ca2+ release channel by the voltage-sensing transverse (T–) tubule dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR)/Ca2+ channel. In a subsequent step, the released Ca2+ amplify SR Ca2+ release by activating release channels that are not linked to the DHPR. Experiments with mutant muscle cells have indicated that skeletal muscle specific DHPR and RyR isoforms are required for skeletal muscle E-C coupling. A direct functional and structural interaction between a DHPR-derived peptide and the RyR has been described. The interaction between the DHPR and RyR may be stabilized by other proteins such as triadin (a SR junctional protein) and modulated by phosphorylation of the DHPR. 相似文献
9.
The skeletal muscle (RyR1) and cardiac muscle (RyR2) ryanodine receptor calcium release channels contain a single, conserved calmodulin (CaM) binding domain, yet are differentially regulated by CaM. Here, we report that high-affinity [(35)S]CaM binding to RyR1 is driven by favorable enthalpic and entropic contributions at Ca(2+) concentrations from <0.01 to 100 microM. At 0.15 microM Ca(2+), [(35)S]CaM bound to RyR2 with decreased affinity and binding enthalpy compared with RyR1. The rates of [(35)S]CaM dissociation from RyR1 increased as the temperature was raised, whereas at 0.15 microM Ca(2+) the rate from RyR2 was little affected. The results suggest major differences in the energetics of CaM binding to and dissociation from RyR1 and RyR2. 相似文献
10.
Ryanodine is a neutral plant alkaloid which functions as a probe for an intracellular Ca2+ release channel (ryanodine receptor) in excitable tissues. Using [3H]ryanodine, a 30 S protein complex comprised of four polypeptides of Mr 565,000 has been isolated and functionally reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers. The effects of salt concentration and divalent cations on skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum [3H]ryanodine binding and Ca2+ release channel activity have been compared. These studies suggest that ryanodine is a good probe for investigating the function of the release channel. 相似文献
11.
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
12.
Importance of Ca2+ influx by Na+/Ca2+ exchange under normal and sodium-loaded conditions in mammalian ventricles 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Satoh H Mukai M Urushida T Katoh H Terada H Hayashi H 《Molecular and cellular biochemistry》2003,242(1-2):11-17
Na+/Ca2+ exchange (NCX) is a major Ca2+ extrusion system in cardiac myocytes, but can also mediate Ca2+ influx and trigger sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release. Under conditions such as digitalis toxicity or ischemia/reperfusion, increased [Na+]i may lead to a rise in [Ca2+]i through NCX, causing Ca2+ overload and triggered arrhythmias. Here we used an agent which selectively blocks Ca2+ influx by NCX, KB-R7943 (KBR), and assessed twitch contractions and Ca2+ transients in rat and guinea pig ventricular myocytes loaded with indo-1. KBR (5 M) did not alter control steady-state twitch contractions or Ca2+ transients at 0.5 Hz in rat, but significantly decreased them in guinea pig myocytes. When cells were Na+-loaded by perfusion of strophanthidin (50 M), the addition of KBR reduced diastolic [Ca2+]i and abolished spontaneous Ca2+ oscillations. In guinea pig papillary muscles exposed to substrate-free hypoxic medium for 60 min, KBR (10 M applied 10 min before and during reoxygenation) reduced both the incidence and duration of reoxygenation-induced arrhythmias. KBR also enhanced the recovery of developed tension after reoxygenation. It is concluded that (1) the importance of Ca2+ influx via NCX for normal excitation-contraction coupling is species-dependent, and (2) Ca2+ influx via NCX may be critical in causing myocardial Ca2+ overload and triggered activities induced by cardiac glycoside or reoxygenation. 相似文献
13.
The interaction of local anesthetics with the ryanodine receptor of the sarcoplasmic reticulum 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
The effects of various local anesthetics (LAs) on the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor were tested. The LAs were divided into three categories according to their effects on the binding of ryanodine to the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes. Ryanodine binding was assayed in the presence of 0.2 m NaCl and 10 m CaCl2. Tetracaine and dibucaine inhibit the binding with half-maximal inhibition (CI50) of 0.12 and 0.25 mm, respectively, while inhibition by benzocaine and procaine occurs with CI50 of about 10-fold higher. Lidocaine, its analogue QX-314, and prilocaine, on the other hand, stimulate the binding up to fourfold with half-maximal stimulation occurring with about 2 mm of the drugs. Lidocaine increases both the receptor affinity for ryanodine by about fivefold and the rate of ryanodine association with its binding site by about 10-fold.Tetracaine interacts with the ryanodine receptor in a non-competitive fashion with respect to ryanodine but it competes with lidocaine for its binding site, suggesting the existence of a single site for the inhibitory and stimulatory LA. 相似文献
14.
Kubota M Narita K Murayama T Suzuki S Soga S Usukura J Ogawa Y Kuba K 《Cell calcium》2005,38(6):557-567
Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) occurs in frog motor nerve terminals after ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are primed for activation by conditioning large Ca2+ entry. We studied which type of RyR exists, whether CICR occurs without conditioning Ca2+ entry and how RyRs are primed. Immunohistochemistry revealed the existence of RyR3 in motor nerve terminals and axons and both RyR1 and RyR3 in muscle fibers. A blocker of RyR, 8-(N,N-diethylamino)octyl 3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride (TMB-8) slightly decreased rises in intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) induced by a short tetanus (50 Hz, 1-2s), but not after treatment with ryanodine. Repetitive tetani (50 Hz for 15s every 20s) produced repetitive rises in [Ca2+]i, whose amplitude overall waxed and waned. TMB-8 blocked the waxing and waning components. Ryanodine suppressed a slow increase in end-plate potentials (EPPs) induced by stimuli (33.3 Hz, 15s) in a low Ca2+, high Mg2+ solution. KN-62, a blocker of Ca(2+)/calmoduline-activated protein kinase II (CaMKII), slightly reduced short tetanus-induced rises in [Ca2+]i, but markedly the slow waxing and waning rises produced by repetitive tetani in both normal and low Ca2+, high Mg2+ solutions. Likewise, KN-62, but not KN-04, an inactive analog, suppressed slow increases in EPP amplitude and miniature EPP frequency during long tetanus. Thus, CICR normally occurs weakly via RyR3 activation by single impulse-induced Ca2+ entry in frog motor nerve terminals and greatly after the priming of RyR via CaMKII activation by conditioning Ca2+ entry, thus, facilitating transmitter exocytosis and its plasticity. 相似文献
15.
Netticadan T Temsah RM Kawabata K Dhalla NS 《Biochemical and biophysical research communications》2002,293(2):727-732
There is increasing evidence to suggest that Ca2+-calmodulin dependent protein kinase (CaMK) regulates the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) function and thus plays an important role in modulating the cardiac performance. Because intracellular Ca2+-overload is an important factor underlying cardiac dysfunction in a heart disease, its effect on SR CaMK was examined in the isolated rat heart preparations. Ca2+-depletion for 5 min followed by Ca2+-repletion for 30 min, which is known to produce intracellular Ca2+-overload, was observed to attenuate cardiac function as well as SR Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-release activities. Attenuated SR function in the heart was associated with reduced CaMK phosphorylation of the SR Ca2+-cycling proteins such as Ca2+-release channel, Ca2+-pump ATPase, and phospholamban, decreased CaMK activity, and depressed levels of SR Ca2+-cycling proteins. These results indicate that alterations in cardiac performance and SR function following the occurrence of intracellular Ca2+-overload may partly be due to changes in the SR CaMK activity. 相似文献
16.
Summary The two high affinity calcium binding sites of the cardiac (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase have been identified with the use of Eu3+. Eu3+ competes for the two high affinity calcium sites on the enzyme. With the use of laser-pulsed fluorescent spectroscopy, the environment of the two sites appear to be heterogeneous and contain different numbers of H2O molecules coordinated to the ion. The ion appears to be occluded even further in the presence of ATP. Using non-radiative energy transfer studies, we were able to estimate the distance between the two Ca2+ sites to be between 9.4 to 10.2 A in the presence of ATP. Finally, from the assumption that the calcium site must contain four carboxylic side chains to provide the 6–8 ligands needed to coordinate calcium, and based on our recently published data, we predict the peptidic backbone of the two sites. 相似文献
17.
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
18.
K. Narita T. Akita M. Osanai T. Shirasaki H. Kijima K. Kuba 《The Journal of general physiology》1998,112(5):593-609
The extent to which Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) affects transmitter release is unknown. Continuous nerve stimulation (20–50 Hz) caused slow transient increases in miniature end-plate potential (MEPP) frequency (MEPP-hump) and intracellular free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in presynaptic terminals (Ca2+-hump) in frog skeletal muscles over a period of minutes in a low Ca2+, high Mg2+ solution. Mn2+ quenched Indo-1 and Fura-2 fluorescence, thus indicating that stimulation was accompanied by opening of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. MEPP-hump depended on extracellular Ca2+ (0.05–0.2 mM) and stimulation frequency. Both the Ca2+- and MEPP-humps were blocked by 8-(N,N-diethylamino)octyl3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride (TMB-8), ryanodine, and thapsigargin, but enhanced by CN−. Thus, Ca2+-hump is generated by the activation of CICR via ryanodine receptors by Ca2+ entry, producing MEPP-hump. A short interruption of tetanus (<1 min) during MEPP-hump quickly reduced MEPP frequency to a level attained under the effect of TMB-8 or thapsigargin, while resuming tetanus swiftly raised MEPP frequency to the previous or higher level. Thus, the steady/equilibrium condition balancing CICR and Ca2+ clearance occurs in nerve terminals with slow changes toward a greater activation of CICR (priming) during the rising phase of MEPP-hump and toward a smaller activation during the decay phase. A short pause applied after the end of MEPP- or Ca2+-hump affected little MEPP frequency or [Ca2+]i, but caused a quick increase (faster than MEPP- or Ca2+-hump) after the pause, whose magnitude increased with an increase in pause duration (<1 min), suggesting that Ca2+ entry-dependent inactivation, but not depriming process, explains the decay of the humps. The depriming process was seen by giving a much longer pause (>1 min). Thus, ryanodine receptors in frog motor nerve terminals are endowed with Ca2+ entry-dependent slow priming and fast inactivation mechanisms, as well as Ca2+ entry-dependent activation, and involved in asynchronous exocytosis. Physiological significance of CICR in presynaptic terminals was discussed. 相似文献
19.
Ana Paula Arruda 《生物化学与生物物理学报:生物膜》2007,1768(6):1498-1505
The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase 1 (SERCA 1) is able to handle the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis in such a way as to determine the parcel of energy that is used for Ca2+ transport and the fraction that is converted into heat. In this work we measured the heat production by SERCA 1 in the two sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fractions: the light fraction (LSR), which is enriched in SERCA and the heavy fraction (HSR), which contains both the SERCA and the ryanodine Ca2+ channel. We verified that although HSR cleaved ATP at faster rate than LSR, the amount of heat released during ATP hydrolysis by HSR was smaller than that measured by LSR. Consequently, the amount of heat released per mol of ATP cleaved (ΔHcal) by HSR was lower compared to LSR. In HSR, the addition of 5 mM Mg2+ or ruthenium red, conditions that close the ryanodine Ca2+ channel, promoted a decrease in the ATPase activity, but the amount of heat released during ATP hydrolysis remained practically the same. In this condition, the ΔHcal values of ATP hydrolysis increased significantly. Neither Mg2+ nor ruthenium red had effect on LSR. Thus, we conclude that heat production by SERCA 1 depends on the region of SR in which the enzyme is inserted and that in HSR, the ΔHcal of ATP hydrolysis by SERCA 1 depends on whether the ryanodine Ca2+ channel is opened or closed. 相似文献
20.
Summary Our interest in the role of sulfhydryl groups (SH) in regulating or altering transport across biological membranes has focused on the significance of a critical SH group associated with the Ca2+-release protein from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). We have shown that binding of heavy metals to this group or oxidation of this sulfhydryl to a disulfide induces rapid Ca2+ release from SR vesicles [1, 2] and induces contraction in skinned muscle fibers [3]. Several models are described in which oxidation and reduction might control the state of the Ca2+-release channel from SR.Abbreviations DTT
Dithiothreitol, redox. - oxidation-reduction
- SDS
Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate
- SH
Sulfhydryl
- SR
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
- T-tubule
Transverse tubule 相似文献