首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The role of extracellular calcium in the glycogenolytic effects of calcium-dependent hormones was examined in a rat liver perfusion system. Decreasing the perfusate CaCl2 concentration resulted in a concentration-dependent inhibition of glucose output by maximal concentrations of vasopressin (20 nM) and angiotensin II (10 nM), but not of glucagon (1.4 nM), cyclic AMP (100 microM), dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10 microM) or phenylephrine (5 microM). However, the effect of phenylephrine was inhibited when livers were perfused with CaCl2-free perfusate containing 0.5 mM EGTA in a duration-dependent manner. These effects were exerted through the inhibition of the maximal response of each hormone, and were associated with a parallel decrease in phosphorylase activation but not with changes in tissue cyclic AMP concentrations. When livers were preloaded with 45Ca for 45 min and then washed for either 15 min or 45 min, these hormones elicited a rapid and transient 45Ca efflux regardless of the perfusate calcium concentration. The sequential perfusion of two hormones resulted in the loss of 45Ca efflux by the second hormone. These results suggest that the glycogenolytic effects of vasopressin and angiotensin II depend on the extracellular calcium and that of phenylephrine primarily on the cellular calcium. It was also demonstrated that these calcium-dependent hormones mobilize calcium from the same pools. However, the mobilization of cellular calcium does not necessarily correlate directly with the glycogenolytic actions of vasopressin and angiotensin II.  相似文献   

2.
Phenylephrine (2.0 microM) induces an alpha 1-receptor-mediated net efflux of Ca2+ from livers of fed rats perfused with medium containing physiological concentrations (1.3 mM) of Ca2+. The onset of efflux (7.1 +/- 0.5 s; n = 16) immediately precedes a stimulation of mitochondrial respiration and glycogenolysis. Maximal rates of efflux are observed between 35 s and 45 s after alpha-agonist administration; thereafter the rate decreases, to be no longer detectable after 3 min. Within seconds of terminating phenylephrine infusion, a net transient uptake of Ca2+ by the liver is observed. Similar effects were observed with vasopressin (1 m-unit/ml) and angiotensin (6 nM). Reducing the perfusate [Ca2+] from 1.3 mM to 10 microM had little effect on alpha-agonist-induced Ca2+ efflux, but abolished the subsequent Ca2+ re-uptake, and hence led to a net loss of 80-120 nmol of Ca2+/g of liver from the tissue. The administration at 5 min intervals of short pulses (90 s) of phenylephrine under these conditions resulted in diminishing amounts of Ca2+ efflux being detected, and these could be correlated with decreased rates of alpha-agonist-induced mitochondrial respiration and glucose output. An examination of the Ca2+ pool mobilized by alpha-adrenergic agonists revealed that a loss of Ca2+ from mitochondria and from a fraction enriched in microsomes accounts for all the Ca2+ efflux detected. It is proposed that the alpha-adrenergic agonists, vasopressin and angiotensin mobilize Ca2+ from the same readily depleted intracellular pool consisting predominantly of mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum, and that the hormone-induced enhanced rate of mitochondrial respiration and glycogenolysis is directly dependent on this mobilization.  相似文献   

3.
The role of extracellular calcium in hormone-induced glycogenolysis was examined in a rat liver perfusion system by manipulating the perfusate calcium concentration and by using calcium antagonistic drugs. When the perfusate contained 1 mM CaCl2, 5 microM phenylephrine, 20 nM vasopressin, and 10 nM angiotensin II caused a persistent increase in glucose output and phosphorylase activity as well as a transient increase in 45Ca efflux from 45Ca preloaded liver. Verapamil hydrochloride (20-100 microM) inhibited the activation of glucose output by these hormones in a dose-dependent manner. This inhibitory effect was also associated with the inhibition of hormone-induced activation of phosphorylase and 45Ca efflux. In the absence of CaCl2 in the perfusate, the glycogenolytic effect of phenylephrine and its inhibition by verapamil were obtained equally as in the presence of CaCl2. However, the effects of vasopressin and angiotensin II were markedly attenuated and were not inhibited any further by verapamil. The substitution of diltiazem hydrochloride for verapamil produced essentially identical results. Cyclic AMP concentrations in the tissue did not change under any of these test conditions. The results indicate that the glycogenolytic effect of alpha-adrenergic agonists depends on intracellular calcium but those of vasopressin and angiotensin II on extracellular calcium, and support the concept that calcium antagonistic drugs inhibit the glycogenolytic effects of calcium-dependent hormones at least by inhibiting the mobilization of calcium ion from cellular pools.  相似文献   

4.
A perfused liver system incorporating a Ca2+-sensitive electrode was used to study the long-term effects of glucagon and cyclic AMP on the mobilization of Ca2+ induced by phenylephrine, vasopressin and angiotensin. At 1.3 mM extracellular Ca2+ the co-administration of glucagon (10 nM) or cyclic AMP (0.2 mM) and a Ca2+-mobilizing hormone led to a synergistic potentiation of Ca2+ uptake by the liver, to a degree which was dependent on the order of hormone administration. A maximum net amount of Ca2+ influx, corresponding to approx. 3800 nmol/g of liver (the maximum rate of influx was 400 nmol/min per g of liver), was induced when cyclic AMP or glucagon was administered about 4 min before vasopressin and angiotensin. These changes are over an order of magnitude greater than those induced by Ca2+-mobilizing hormones alone [Altin & Bygrave (1985) Biochem. J. 232, 911-917]. For a maximal response the influx of Ca2+ was transient and was essentially complete after about 20 min. Removal of the hormones was followed by a gradual efflux of Ca2+ from the liver over a period of 30-50 min; thereafter, a similar response could be obtained by a second administration of hormones. Dose-response measurements indicate that the potentiation of Ca2+ influx by glucagon occurs even at low (physiological) concentrations of the hormone. By comparison with phenylephrine, the stimulation of Ca2+ influx by vasopressin and angiotensin is more sensitive to low concentrations of glucagon and cyclic AMP, and can be correlated with a 20-50-fold increase in the calcium content of mitochondria. The reversible uptake of such large quantities of Ca2+ implicates the mitochondria in long-term cellular Ca2+ regulation.  相似文献   

5.
Glucagon stimulates flux through the glycine cleavage system (GCS) in isolated rat hepatocytes (Jois, M., Hall, B., Fewer, K., and Brosnan, J. T. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 3347-3351. In the present study, flux through GCS was measured in isolated rat liver perfused with 100 nM glucagon, 1 microM epinephrine, 1 microM norepinephrine, 10 microM phenylephrine, or 100 nM vasopressin. These hormones increased flux through GCS in perfused rat liver by 100-200% above the basal rate. The possibility that the stimulation of flux by adrenergic agonists and vasopressin is mediated by increases in cytoplasmic Ca2+ which in turn could regulate mitochondrial glycine catabolism was examined by measuring flux through GCS in isolated mitochondria in the presence of 0.04-2.88 microM free Ca2+. Flux through GCS in isolated mitochondria was exquisitely sensitive to free Ca2+ in the medium; half-maximal stimulation occurred at about 0.4 microM free Ca2+ and maximal stimulation (7-fold) was reached when the free Ca2+ in the medium was 1 microM. The Vmax (nanomoles/mg protein/min) and Km (millimolar) values for the flux through GCS in intact mitochondria were 0.67 +/- 0.16 and 20.66 +/- 4.82 in the presence of 1 mM [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid and 3.28 +/- 0.76 and 10.98 +/- 1.91 in presence of 0.5 microM free Ca2+, respectively. The results show that the flux through GCS is sensitive to concentrations of calcium which would be achieved in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes stimulated by calcium-mobilizing hormones.  相似文献   

6.
To identify the role of Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular pool(s) in the action of alpha-adrenergic agonist, the effects of dantrolene on phenylephrine-induced glycogenolysis were investigated in perfused rat liver. Dantrolene (5 X 10(-5) M) inhibited both glycogenolysis and 45Ca efflux induced by 5 X 10(-7) M phenylephrine. The inhibition by dantrolene was observed in the presence and absence of perfusate calcium. In contrast, dantrolene did not inhibit glycogenolysis induced by glucagon. To confirm the specificity of dantrolene action on calcium release in liver, experiments were also carried out using isolated hepatocytes. Dantrolene did not affect phenylephrine-induced production of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. The compound did inhibit a rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration induced by phenylephrine both in the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+. Thus, these results suggest that calcium release from an intracellular pool is essential for the initiation of alpha-adrenergic stimulation of glycogenolysis in the perfused rat liver.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of phenylephrine, vasopressin and angiotensin II on cytoplasmic free calcium concentration, [Ca2+]c, were examined by monitoring aequorin bioluminescence in isolated hepatocytes preloaded with aequorin. In the presence of 0.5 mM calcium in the medium, the pattern of changes in aequorin bioluminescence induced by phenylephrine was different from that induced by vasopressin or angiotensin II. When extracellular calcium concentration was reduced to 1 microM, however, these three agents induced identical changes in aequorin bioluminescence. These results suggest that the mode of action of phenylephrine on cytoplasmic free calcium concentration differs from that of either vasopressin or angiotensin II and that the difference in ability to increase calcium influx may account for the distinct patterns induced by these agents.  相似文献   

8.
A Ca2+-sensitive electrode was used to study net Ca2+-flux changes induced by the administration of phenylephrine, vasopressin and angiotensin to the perfused rat liver. The studies reveal that, although the Ca2+ responses induced by vasopressin and angiotensin are similar, they are quite different from the Ca2+ fluxes induced by phenylephrine. The administration of phenylephrine is accompanied by a stimulation of a net amount of Ca2+ efflux (140 nmol/g of liver). A re-uptake of a similar amount of Ca2+ occurs only after the hormone is removed. In contrast, the administration of vasopressin or angiotensin to livers perfused with 1.3 mM-Ca2+ induces the release of a relatively small amount of Ca2+ (approx. 40 nmol/g of liver) during the first 60 s. This is followed by a much larger amount of Ca2+ uptake (70-140 nmol/g of liver) after 1-2.5 min of hormone administration, and a slow efflux or loss of a similar amount of Ca2+ over a period of 6-8 min. At lower concentrations of perfusate Ca2+ (less than 600 microM) these hormones induce only a net efflux of the ion. These results suggest that at physiological concentrations of extracellular Ca2+ the mechanism by which alpha-adrenergic agonists mobilize cellular Ca2+ is different from that involving vasopressin and angiotensin. It seems that the hormones may have quite diverse effects on Ca2+ transport across the plasma membrane and perhaps organellar membranes in liver.  相似文献   

9.
Properties of different Ca2+ pools in permeabilized rat thymocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The regulation of free Ca2+ concentration by intracellular pools and their participation in the mitogen-induced changes of the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, was studied in digitonin-permeabilized and intact rat thymocytes using a Ca2+-selective electrode, chlortetracycline fluorescence and the Ca2+ indicator quin-2. It is shown that in permeabilized thymocytes Ca2+ can be accumulated by two intracellular compartments, mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial. Ca2+ uptake by the non-mitochondrial compartment, presumably the endoplasmic reticulum, is observed only in the presence of MgATP, is increased by oxalate and inhibited by vanadate. The mitochondria do not accumulate calcium at a free Ca2+ concentration below 1 microM. The non-mitochondrial compartment has a greater affinity for calcium and is capable of sequestering Ca2+ at a free Ca2+ concentration less than 1 microM. At free Ca2+ concentration close to the cytoplasmic (0.1 microM) the main calcium pool in permeabilized thymocytes is localized in the non-mitochondrial compartment. Ca2+ accumulated in the non-mitochondrial pool can be released by inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) which has been inferred to mediate Ca2+ mobilization in a number of cell types. Under experimental conditions in which ATP-dependent Ca2+ influx is blocked, the addition of IP3 results in a large Ca2+ release from the non-mitochondrial pool; thus IP3 acts by activation of a specific efflux pathway rather than by inhibiting Ca2+ influx. SH reagents do not prevent IP3-induced Ca2+ mobilization. Addition of the mitochondrial uncouplers, FCCP or ClCCP, to intact thymocytes results in no increase in [Ca2+]i measured with quin-2 tetraoxymethyl ester whereas the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 induces a Ca2+ release from the non-mitochondrial store(s). Thus, the data obtained on intact cells agree with those obtained in permeabilized thymocytes. The mitogen concanavalin A increases [Ca2+]i in intact thymocytes suspended in both Ca2+-containing an Ca2+-free medium. This indicates a mitogen-induced mobilization of an intracellular Ca2+ pool, probably via the IP3 pathway.  相似文献   

10.
The relation between Ca2+ efflux, Ca2+ mobilization from mitochondria and glycogenolysis was studied in perfused euthyroid and hypothyroid rat livers stimulated by Ca2+-mobilizing hormones. Ca2+ efflux, induced by noradrenaline (1 microM) in the absence or presence of DL-propranolol (10 microM) from livers perfused with medium containing a low concentration of Ca2+ (approx. 24 microM), was decreased by more than 50% in hypothyroidism. This correlated with an equal decrease of the fractional mobilization of mitochondrial Ca2+, which could account for 65% of the difference between the net amounts of Ca2+ expelled from the euthyroid and hypothyroid livers. With vasopressin (10 nM) similar results were found, suggesting that hypothyroidism has a general effect on mobilization of internal Ca2+. In normal Ca2+ medium (1300 microM), however, the effect of vasopressin on net Ca2+ fluxes and phosphorylase activation was not impaired in hypothyroidism, indicating that Ca2+ mobilization from the mitochondria in this case plays a minor role in phosphorylase activation. The alpha 1-adrenergic responses of Ca2+ efflux, phosphorylase activation and glucose output, glucose-6-phosphatase activity and oxygen consumption in hypothyroid rat liver were completely restored by in vivo T3 injections (0.5 micrograms per 100 g body weight, daily during 3 days). Perfusion with T3 (100 pM) during 19 min did not influence hypothyroid rat liver oxygen consumption and alpha 1-receptor-mediated Ca2+ efflux. However, this in vitro T3 treatment showed a completely recovered alpha 1-adrenergic response of phosphorylase and a partly restored glucose-6-phosphatase activity and glucose output. The results indicate that thyroid hormones may control alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation of glycogenolysis by at least two mechanisms, i.e., a long-term action on Ca2+ mobilization, and a short-term action on separate stages of the glycogenolytic process.  相似文献   

11.
1. Exposure of intact perfused rat liver to EGTA, vasopressin or phenylephrine resulted in a rapid decrease in polysome formation. Pretreatment with phentolamine, an alpha-adrenergic antagonist, blocked the effect of phenylephrine. 2. Hormonal inhibitions of leucine incorporation into protein in isolated hepatocytes and of polysome formation in perfused liver were reversed in the presence of supraphysiologic extracellular Ca2+ concentrations. 3. The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol exerted minimal effects on polysome content. 4. It is proposed that intracellular Ca2+ stores sensitive to hormonal modulation are necessary for maintenance of protein synthesis in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

12.
Net hepatic Ca2+ efflux, K+ uptake and glycogen breakdown in response to the alpha 1-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine were studied. Rat livers were perfused with CO2/bicarbonate-buffered solutions containing 10 microM Ca2+ and different amounts of Mg2+. K+-free medium and/or ouabain were used to block (Na+ + K+)-ATPase-dependent K+ uptake. In some experiments a sharp increase in extracellular Ca2+ concentrations was produced by infusing CaCl2 into the medium entering the liver. Perfusion with K+-free medium and ouabain enhanced the phenylephrine-induced Ca2+ efflux and diminished the glycogenolytic response, indicating a dissociation of Ca2+ release and glycogenolysis. Exogenous Ca2+ had practically no effect if livers were perfused with regular medium containing 1.2 mM Mg2+. In the presence of phenylephrine and if extracellular Mg2+ concentrations were lowered by omitting Mg2+ from the medium or by preperfusion with EGTA, exogenous Ca2+ was glycogenolytically effective and also produced a transient K+ uptake. Increased extracellular concentrations of Mg2+ inhibited the effects of exogenous Ca2+. In the presence of phenylephrine, higher concentrations of Mg2+ were needed than in the absence of alpha 1-adrenergic agonist to achieve a similar degree of inhibition. In one respect ouabain effects were comparable to those of phenylephrine: the glycoside also increased the metabolic response to exogenous Ca2+ and diminished the sensitivity towards Mg2+. Phenylephrine and ouabain may both enhance the permeability of plasma membranes for Ca2+.  相似文献   

13.
Co-administration of glucagon and vasopressin to rat liver perfused with buffer containing 1.3 mM-Ca2+ induces a 4-fold increase in Pi in the subsequently isolated mitochondria (from approx. 9 to approx. 40 nmol/mg of mitochondrial protein). This increase is not attributable to PPi hydrolysis, and is not observed if the perfusate Ca2+ is lowered from 1.3 mM to 50 microM. The increase in mitochondrial Pi closely parallels that of mitochondrial Ca2+; when the increase in Pi and Ca2+ accumulation is maximal, the molar ratio is close to that in Ca3(PO4)2. Measurement of changes in the perfusate Pi revealed that, whereas administration of glucagon or vasopressin alone brought about a rapid decline in perfusate Pi, the largest decrease (reflecting net retention of Pi by the liver) was observed when the hormone was co-administered in the presence of 1.3 mM-Ca2+. The synergistic action of glucagon plus vasopressin was nullified by lowering the perfusate Ca2+ to 50 microM. The data provide evidence that, whereas glucagon may be able to alter Pi fluxes directly in intact liver, any alterations induced by vasopressin are indirect and result only from its action of mobilizing Ca2+.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of glucagon and vasopressin, singly or together, on cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration [( Ca2+]i) and on the 45Ca2+ efflux were studied in isolated rat liver cells. In the presence of 1 mM external Ca2+, glucagon and vasopressin added singly induced sustained increases in [Ca2+]i. The rate of the initial fast phase of the [Ca2+]i increase and the magnitude of the final plateau were dependent on the concentrations (50 pm-0.1 microM) of glucagon and vasopressin. Preincubating the cells with a low concentration of glucagon (0.1 nM) for 2 min markedly accelerated the fast phase and elevated the plateau of the [Ca2+]i increase caused by vasopressin. In the absence of external free Ca2+, glucagon and vasopressin transiently increased [Ca2+]i and stimulated the 45Ca2+ efflux from the cells, indicating mobilization of Ca2+ from internal store(s). Preincubating the cells with 0.1 nM-glucagon accelerated the rate of the fast phase of the [Ca2+]i rise caused by the subsequent addition of vasopressin. However, unlike what was observed in the presence of 1 mM-Ca2+, glucagon no longer enhanced the maximal [Ca2+]i response to vasopressin. In the absence of external free Ca2+, higher concentrations (1 nM-0.1 microM) of glucagon, which initiated larger increases in [Ca2+]i, drastically decreased the subsequent Ca2+ response to vasopressin (10 nM). At these concentrations, glucagon also decreased the vasopressin-stimulated 45Ca2+ efflux from the cells. It is suggested that, in the liver, glucagon accelerates the fast phase and elevates the plateau of the vasopressin-mediated [Ca2+]i increase respectively by releasing Ca2+ from the same internal store as that permeabilized by vasopressin, probably the endoplasmic reticulum, and potentiating the influx of extracellular Ca2+ caused by this hormone.  相似文献   

15.
D S Lapointe  M S Olson 《Cell calcium》1991,12(10):743-753
The kinetics of calcium movements in the isolated perfused rat liver were examined using compartmental analysis of the efflux profiles of 45Ca2+ from 45Ca(2+)-equilibrated livers under a variety of calcium concentrations and hormonal treatments. From the 45Ca2+ efflux profiles, we determined that a three compartment model was appropriate to describe the movements of calcium in the liver on the time scale of the experiments. Hormonal treatment with the alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, or the vasoactive peptide, vasopressin, during the efflux period lowered significantly the rate of transfer of Ca2+ between the internal compartments at all of the calcium concentrations employed. Also, phenylephrine treatment leads to increased transfer of Ca2+ into the liver from the perfusate. The temporal characteristics of the phenylephrine and vasopressin sensitive Ca2+ pools were examined by pulsing livers, loaded for variable periods of time with 45Ca2+, with the two hormones during the efflux of 45Ca2+ to measure the kinetics of Ca2+ exchange in the hormone-sensitive pools. Results from these experiments indicate that the rate of unstimulated Ca2+ efflux, k2, for the phenylephrine and vasopressin sensitive Ca2+ pools, modeled as a one compartment system, are the same, 0.074 and 0.078 min-1 for phenylephrine and vasopressin respectively, corresponding to half times for turnover of the pool(s) of 9.3 and 8.9 min, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Stimulation of hepatocytes with vasopressin (10 nM) in the presence of 1.25 mM extracellular Ca2+ increased glycogen phosphorylase activity 4-fold within 15s and provoked a rapid efflux of cell-associated Ca2+. Vasopressin also caused a transient increase in the Ca content of a mitochondria-rich fraction separated within seconds of hormone stimulation by a rapid fractionation technique [Shears & Kirk (1984) Biochem. J. 219, 375-382]. The Ca content of this fraction was restored to the control value within 2 min of hormone addition. These results indicate that mitochondria are not the source of the cell-associated Ca which is mobilized in the cytosol of vasopressin-stimulated hepatocytes. Rather, these organelles buffer the increase in cytosol [Ca2+] attributable to Ca mobilization from non-mitochondrial sources.  相似文献   

17.
A Jakob  J Becker  G Sch?ttli  G Fritzsch 《FEBS letters》1989,246(1-2):127-130
The possibility that Mg2+ mobilization is stimulated in perfused liver by alpha 1-adrenergic agonists was studied by measuring Mg2+ release in response to 0.5 and 20 microM phenylephrine. During preperfusion exogenous Mg2+ was added to the medium to give 1.2 mM. 5 min before starting the addition of phenylephrine the infusion of exogenous Mg2+ was stopped. Mg2+ in the perfusate leaving the liver was measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Analysis of the Mg2+ decay curves with two exponential models indicated that phenylephrine caused dose-dependent Mg2+ release from perfused rat livers.  相似文献   

18.
1. The inflow of Mn2+ across the plasma membranes of isolated hepatocytes was monitored by measuring the quenching of the fluorescence of intracellular quin2, by atomic absorption spectroscopy and by the uptake of 54Mn2+. The inflow of other divalent metal ions was measured using quin2. 2. Under ionic conditions which resembled those present in the cytoplasmic space, Mn2+, Zn2+, Co2+, Ni2+ and Cd2+ each quenched the fluorescence of a solution of Ca2(+)-quin2. 3. The addition of Mn2+, Zn2+, Co2+, Ni2+ or Cd2+ to cells loaded with quin2 caused a time-dependent decrease in the fluorescence of intracellular quin2. Plots of the rate of decrease in fluorescence as a function of the concentration of Mn2+ reached a plateau at 100 microM-Mn2+. 4. The rate of decrease in fluorescence induced by Mn2+ was stimulated by 20% in the presence of vasopressin. The effect of vasopressin was completely inhibited by 200 microM-verapamil. Adrenaline, angiotensin II and glucagon also stimulated the rate of decrease in the fluorescence of intracellular quin2 induced by Mn2+. 5. The rate of decrease in fluorescence induced by Zn2+, Co2+, Ni2+ or Cd2+ was stimulated by between 20 and 190% in the presence of vasopressin or angiotensin II. 6. The rates of uptake of Mn2+ measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy or by using 54Mn2+ were inhibited by about 20% by 1.3 mM-Ca2+o and stimulated by 30% by vasopressin. 7. Plots of Mn2+ uptake, measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy or with 54Mn2+, as a function of the extracellular concentration of Mn2+ were biphasic over the range 0.05-1.0 mM added Mn2+ and did not reach a plateau at 1.0 mM-Mn2+. 8. It is concluded that (i) hepatocytes possess both a basal and a receptor-activated divalent cation inflow system, each of which has a broad specificity for metal ions, and (ii) the receptor-activated divalent cation inflow system is the receptor-operated Ca2+ channel.  相似文献   

19.
The role of Ca2+ in stimulation of the malate-aspartate shuttle by norepinephrine and vasopressin was studied in perfused rat liver. Shuttle capacity was indexed by measuring the changes in both the rate of production of glucose from sorbitol and the ratio of lactate to pyruvate during the oxidation of ethanol. (T. Sugano et al. (1986) Amer. J. Physiol. 251, E385-E392). Asparagine (0.5 mM), but not alanine (0.5 mM) decreased the ethanol-induced responses. Norepinephrine and vasopressin had no effect on the ethanol-induced responses when the liver was perfused with sorbitol or glycerol. In the presence of 0.25 mM alanine, norepinephrine, vasopressin, and A23187 decreased the ethanol-induced responses that occurred with the increase of flux of Ca2+. In liver perfused with Ca2+-free medium, asparagine also decreased the ethanol-induced responses, but norepinephrine and vasopressin had no effect. Aminooxyacetate inhibited the effects of norepinephrine, A23187, and asparagine. Regardless of the presence or absence of perfusate Ca2+, the combination of glucagon and alanine had no effect on the ethanol-induced responses. Norepinephrine caused a decrease in levels of alpha-ketoglutarate, aspartate, and glutamate in hepatocytes incubated with Ca2+. The present data suggest that the redistribution of cellular Ca2+ may activate the efflux of aspartate from mitochondria in rat liver, resulting in an increase in the capacity of the malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of cAMP on ATP-induced intracellular Ca+ mobilization in cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells was investigated. Treatment of cells for 3 min at 37 degrees C with dibutyryl cAMP, a membrane-permeable analogue of cAMP, at concentration up to 500 microM resulted in 1.5- to 1.7-fold increase in the peak cytosolic Ca2+ concentration when cells were stimulated with 3 to 200 microM ATP either in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. Similar results were obtained when 0.5 mM 8-Br-cAMP or 10 microM forskolin was used instead of dibutyryl cAMP. In contrast to the Ca2+ response, dibutyryl cAMP did not affect ATP-induced formation of inositol trisphosphate (IP3). Furthermore, the dibutyryl cAMP treatment did not affect the size of the Ca2+ response elicited by 10 microM ionomycin. These results suggest that intracellular cAMP potentiates the ATP-induced Ca2+ response by enhancing Ca2+ release from the intracellular Ca2+ store(s), rather than by increasing the ATP-induced production of IP3 or by increasing the size of the intracellular Ca2+ store. Using saponin-permeabilized cells, we have shown directly that cAMP enhances Ca2+ mobilization by potentiating the Ca2+-releasing effect of IP3 from the intracellular Ca2+ store.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号