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1.
Addition of membrane-permeable cyclic GMP (cGMP) and cyclic AMP (cAMP) were shown to cause elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]cyt) in tobacco (Nicotiana plumbaginofolia) protoplasts. Under the same conditions these cyclic nucleotides were shown to provoke a physiological swelling response in the protoplasts. Nonmembrane-permeable cAMP and cGMP were unable to trigger a detectable [Ca2+]cyt response. Cyclic-nucleotide-mediated elevations in [Ca2+]cyt involved both internal and external Ca2+ stores. Both cAMP- and cGMP-mediated [Ca2+]cyt elevations could be inhibited by the Ca2+-channel blocker verapamil. Addition of inhibitors of phosphodiesterases (isobutylmethylxanthine and zaprinast) and the adenylate cyclase agonist forskolin to the protoplasts (predicted to elevate in vivo cyclic-nucleotide concentrations) caused elevations in [Ca2+]cyt. Addition of the adenylate cyclase inhibitor 2′,5′-dideoxyadenosine before forskolin significantly inhibited the forskolin-induced [Ca2+]cyt elevation. Taken together, these data suggest that a potential communication point for cross-talk between signal transduction pathways using cyclic nucleotides in plants is at the level of Ca2+ signaling.  相似文献   

2.
Al toxicity is a major problem that limits crop productivity on acid soils. It has been suggested that Al toxicity is linked to changes in cellular Ca homeostasis and the blockage of plasma membrane Ca2+-permeable channels. BY-2 suspension-cultured cells of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) exhibit rapid cell expansion that is sensitive to Al. Therefore, the effect of Al on changes in cytoplasmic free Ca concentration ([Ca2+]cyt) was followed in BY-2 cells to assess whether Al perturbed cellular Ca homeostasis. Al exposure resulted in a prolonged reduction in [Ca2+]cyt and inhibition of growth that was similar to the effect of the Ca2+ channel blocker La3+ and the Ca2+ chelator ethyleneglycol-bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid. The Ca2+ channel blockers verapamil and nifedipine did not induce a decrease in [Ca2+]cyt in these cells and also failed to inhibit growth. Al and La3+, but not verapamil or nifedipine, reduced the rate of Mn2+ quenching of Indo-1 fluorescence, which is consistent with the blockage of Ca2+- and Mn2+-permeable channels. These results suggest that Al may act to block Ca2+ channels at the plasma membrane of plant cells and this action may play a crucial role in the phytotoxic activity of the Al ion.  相似文献   

3.
The divalent cation Sr2+ induced repetitive transient spikes of the cytosolic Ca2+ activity [Ca2+]cy and parallel repetitive transient hyperpolarizations of the plasma membrane in the unicellular green alga Eremosphaera viridis. [Ca2+]cy measurements, membrane potential measurements, and cation analysis of the cells were used to elucidate the mechanism of Sr2+-induced [Ca2+]cy oscillations. Sr2+ was effectively and rapidly compartmentalized within the cell, probably into the vacuole. The [Ca2+]cy oscillations cause membrane potential oscillations, and not the reverse. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-ATPase blockers 2,5-di-tert-butylhydroquinone and cyclopiazonic acid inhibited Sr2+-induced repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes, whereas the compartmentalization of Sr2+ was not influenced. A repetitive Ca2+ release and Ca2+ re-uptake by the ER probably generated repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes in E. viridis in the presence of Sr2+. The inhibitory effect of ruthenium red and ryanodine indicated that the Sr2+-induced Ca2+ release from the ER was mediated by a ryanodine/cyclic ADP-ribose type of Ca2+ channel. The blockage of Sr2+-induced repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes by La3+ or Gd3+ indicated the necessity of a certain influx of divalent cations for sustained [Ca2+]cy oscillations. Based on these data we present a mathematical model that describes the baseline spiking [Ca2+]cy oscillations in E. viridis.  相似文献   

4.
The anoxia-dependent elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]cyt, was investigated in plants differing in tolerance to hypoxia. The [Ca2+]cyt was measured by fluorescence microscopy in single protoplasts loaded with the calcium-fluoroprobe Fura 2-AM. Imposition of anoxia led to a fast (within 3 min) significant elevation of [Ca2+]cyt in rice leaf protoplasts. A tenfold drop in the external Ca2+ concentration (to 0.1 mM) resulted in considerable decrease of the [Ca2+]cyt shift. Rice root protoplasts reacted upon anoxia with higher amplitude. Addition of plasma membrane (verapamil, La3+ and EGTA) and intracellular membrane Ca2+-channel antagonists (Li+, ruthenium red and cyclosporine A) reduced the anoxic Ca2+-accumulation in rice. Wheat protoplasts responded to anoxia by smaller changes of [Ca2+]cyt. In wheat leaf protoplasts, the amplitude of the Ca2+-shift little depended on the external level of Ca2+. Wheat root protoplasts were characterized by a small shift of [Ca2+]cyt under anoxia. Plasmalemma Ca2+-channel blockers had little effect on the elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ in wheat protoplasts. Intact rice seedlings absorbed Ca2+ from the external medium under anoxic treatment. On the contrary, wheat seedlings were characterized by leakage of Ca2+. Verapamil abolished the Ca2+ influx in rice roots and Ca2+ efflux from wheat roots. Anoxia-induced [Ca2+]cyt elevation was high particularly in rice, a hypoxia-tolerant species. In conclusion, both external and internal Ca2+ stores are important for anoxic [Ca2+]cyt elevation in rice, whereas the hypoxia-intolerant wheat does not require external sources for [Ca2+]cyt rise. Leaf and root protoplasts similarly responded to anoxia, independent of their organ origin.  相似文献   

5.
Calcium can activate mitochondrial metabolism, and the possibility that mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake and extrusion modulate free cytosolic [Ca2+] (Cac) now has renewed interest. We use whole-cell and perforated patch clamp methods together with rapid local perfusion to introduce probes and inhibitors to rat chromaffin cells, to evoke Ca2+ entry, and to monitor Ca2+-activated currents that report near-surface [Ca2+]. We show that rapid recovery from elevations of Cac requires both the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter and the mitochondrial energization that drives Ca2+ uptake through it. Applying imaging and single-cell photometric methods, we find that the probe rhod-2 selectively localizes to mitochondria and uses its responses to quantify mitochondrial free [Ca2+] (Cam). The indicated resting Cam of 100–200 nM is similar to the resting Cac reported by the probes indo-1 and Calcium Green, or its dextran conjugate in the cytoplasm. Simultaneous monitoring of Cam and Cac at high temporal resolution shows that, although Cam increases less than Cac, mitochondrial sequestration of Ca2+ is fast and has high capacity. We find that mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake limits the rise and underlies the rapid decay of Cac excursions produced by Ca2+ entry or by mobilization of reticular stores. We also find that subsequent export of Ca2+ from mitochondria, seen as declining Cam, prolongs complete Cac recovery and that suppressing export of Ca2+, by inhibition of the mitochondrial Na+/ Ca2+ exchanger, reversibly hastens final recovery of Cac. We conclude that mitochondria are active participants in cellular Ca2+ signaling, whose unique role is determined by their ability to rapidly accumulate and then release large quantities of Ca2+.  相似文献   

6.
Inactivation of inward-rectifying K+ channels (IK,in) by a rise in cytosolic free [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) is a key event leading to solute loss from guard cells and stomatal closure. However, [Ca2+]i action on IK,in has never been quantified, nor are its origins well understood. We used membrane voltage to manipulate [Ca2+]i (A. Grabov and M.R. Blatt [1998] Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95: 4778–4783) while recording IK,in under a voltage clamp and [Ca2+]i by Fura-2 fluorescence ratiophotometry. IK,in inactivation correlated positively with [Ca2+]i and indicated a Ki of 329 ± 31 nm with cooperative binding of four Ca2+ ions per channel. IK,in was promoted by the Ca2+ channel antagonists Gd3+ and calcicludine, both of which suppressed the [Ca2+]i rise, but the [Ca2+]i rise was unaffected by the K+ channel blocker Cs+. We also found that ryanodine, an antagonist of intracellular Ca2+ channels that mediate Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release, blocked the [Ca2+]i rise, and Mn2+ quenching of Fura-2 fluorescence showed that membrane hyperpolarization triggered divalent release from intracellular stores. These and additional results point to a high signal gain in [Ca2+]i control of IK,in and to roles for discrete Ca2+ flux pathways in feedback control of the K+ channels by membrane voltage.Ca2+ underlies many fundamental regulatory processes in plants, including adaptive responses to abiotic environmental stress (Knight et al., 1996; Russell et al., 1996; McAinsh et al., 1997) and programmed cell death evoked by pathogen attack (Low and Merida, 1996; Hammondkosack and Jones, 1997). Coordination of changes in [Ca2+]i and its integration with downstream response elements are central in coupling stimulus input to cellular response in these processes.In stomatal guard cells, the best characterized higher-plant cell model, major downstream targets of [Ca2+]i and their roles in stomatal function have been identified. Increasing [Ca2+]i is known to inactivate IK,in and to activate Cl channels, events that bias plasma membrane transport for net efflux of osmotically active solute and a loss of turgor, which drives stomatal closure (Blatt and Grabov, 1997). Furthermore, changes in [Ca2+]i are associated with ABA, CO2, and the growth hormone auxin (Blatt and Grabov, 1997; McAinsh et al., 1997). These [Ca2+]i signals have been observed to oscillate (McAinsh et al., 1995; Webb et al., 1996), characteristics that may constitute “Ca2+ signatures” to encode specific downstream responses (Berridge, 1996). Yet, despite the evidence for [Ca2+]i signaling in guard cells, surprisingly little detail is known about the link between [Ca2+]i changes and ion channel activity at the plasma membrane or about the mechanisms mediating such [Ca2+]i changes. To our knowledge, in no instance have the characteristics of ion channel regulation by Ca2+ been quantified directly in any higher-plant cell.We recently described the coupling of membrane voltage to [Ca2+]i, demonstrating that hyperpolarization, whether under a voltage clamp or in the presence of low [K+]o, evoked [Ca2+]i increases in guard cells, and that the voltage threshold for [Ca2+]i rise was profoundly altered by ABA (Grabov and Blatt, 1998). Our observations indicated a link to Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane and raised questions about the efficacy of [Ca2+]i in inactivating IK,in and about the contributions of intracellular Ca2+ release to the [Ca2+]i signal. We have used membrane voltage to experimentally manipulate [Ca2+]i and report that IK,in is strongly dependent on [Ca2+]i, consistent with a cooperative binding of four Ca2+ ions to effect inactivation. Additional experiments indicate that voltage-evoked [Ca2+]i increases depend both on Ca2+ influx and on release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. These results underscore the role of [Ca2+]i as a high-gain “switch” in the control of IK,in, and implicate [Ca2+]i in feedback control linking membrane voltage to the activity of the K+ channels.  相似文献   

7.
Pollen tube growth is crucial for the delivery of sperm cells to the ovule during flowering plant reproduction. Previous in vitro imaging of Lilium longiflorum and Nicotiana tabacum has shown that growing pollen tubes exhibit a tip-focused Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) gradient and regular oscillations of the cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]cyt) in the tip region. Whether this [Ca2+] gradient and/or [Ca2+]cyt oscillations are present as the tube grows through the stigma (in vivo condition), however, is still not clear. We monitored [Ca2+]cyt dynamics in pollen tubes under various conditions using Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and N. tabacum expressing yellow cameleon 3.60, a fluorescent calcium indicator with a large dynamic range. The tip-focused [Ca2+]cyt gradient was always observed in growing pollen tubes. Regular oscillations of the [Ca2+]cyt, however, were rarely identified in Arabidopsis or N. tabacum pollen tubes grown under the in vivo condition or in those placed in germination medium just after they had grown through a style (semi-in vivo condition). On the other hand, regular oscillations were observed in vitro in both growing and nongrowing pollen tubes, although the oscillation amplitude was 5-fold greater in the nongrowing pollen tubes compared with growing pollen tubes. These results suggested that a submicromolar [Ca2+]cyt in the tip region is essential for pollen tube growth, whereas a regular [Ca2+] oscillation is not. Next, we monitored [Ca2+] dynamics in the endoplasmic reticulum ([Ca2+]ER) in relation to Arabidopsis pollen tube growth using yellow cameleon 4.60, which has a lower affinity for Ca2+ compared with yellow cameleon 3.60. The [Ca2+]ER in pollen tubes grown under the semi-in vivo condition was between 100 and 500 μm. In addition, cyclopiazonic acid, an inhibitor of ER-type Ca2+-ATPases, inhibited growth and decreased the [Ca2+]ER. Our observations suggest that the ER serves as one of the Ca2+ stores in the pollen tube and cyclopiazonic acid-sensitive Ca2+-ATPases in the ER are required for pollen tube growth.In many flowering plants, a pollen grain that lands on the top surface of a stigma will hydrate and germinate a pollen tube. Following germination, the pollen tube enters the style and grows through the wall of transmitting tract cells on the way to the ovary, where the tube emerges to release the sperm for double fertilization. Therefore, pollen tube growth is essential for reproduction in flowering plants.Since Brewbaker and Kwack (1963) revealed that Ca2+ is essential for in vitro pollen tube cultures, the relationship between the Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) and pollen tube growth has been further examined under in vitro germination culture conditions. Ratiometric ion imaging using fluorescent dye has revealed that the apical domain of a pollen tube grown in vitro contains a tip-focused [Ca2+] gradient (Pierson et al., 1994, 1996; Cheung and Wu, 2008) and that the cytoplasmic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]cyt) in the tip region and the growth rate oscillate with the same periodicity (Pierson et al., 1996; Holdaway-Clarke et al., 1997; Messerli and Robinson, 1997). Therefore, oscillation of the [Ca2+]cyt has been thought to correlate with pollen tube growth. It is not clear, however, whether regular [Ca2+]cyt oscillations in the tip region occur in pollen tubes growing through stigmas and styles.The [Ca2+]cyt is controlled temporally and spatially by transporters in the membranes of intracellular compartments and in the plasma membrane (Sze et al., 2000). Studies using a Ca2+-sensitive vibrating electrode revealed Ca2+ influx in the tip region of the pollen tube (Pierson et al., 1994; Holdaway-Clarke et al., 1997; Franklin-Tong et al., 2002). Stretch-activated Ca2+ channels have been found in the plasma membrane using patch-clamp electrophysiology (Kuhtreiber and Jaffe, 1990; Dutta and Robinson, 2004). Recently, CNGC18 was identified as a Ca2+-permeable channel in the plasma membrane that is essential for pollen tube growth (Frietsch et al., 2007). The intracellular compartments that store Ca2+ in the pollen tube and the relevant Ca2+ transporters, however, have yet to be identified.Yellow cameleons are genetically encoded Ca2+ indicators that were developed to monitor the [Ca2+] in living cells (Miyawaki et al., 1997). These indicators are chimeric proteins consisting of enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP), calmodulin (CaM), a glycylglycine linker, the CaM-binding domain of myosin light chain kinase (M13), and enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP). When the CaM domain binds Ca2+, the domain associates with the M13 peptide and induces fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between ECFP and EYFP. Several types of cameleons have been developed by tuning the CaM domain binding affinity for Ca2+. Yellow cameleon 2.1 (YC2.1) is a high-affinity indicator that has been used to monitor the [Ca2+]cyt in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) guard cells (Allen et al., 1999, 2000, 2001), Lilium longiflorum and Nicotiana tabacum pollen tubes (Watahiki et al., 2004), and the root hair of Medicago truncatula (Miwa et al., 2006). YC3.1 is a low-affinity indicator that has been used to monitor the [Ca2+]cyt during pollen germination and in papilla cells of Arabidopsis (Iwano et al., 2004).Recently, YC3.60 was developed as a new YC variant (Nagai et al., 2004), in which the acceptor fluorophore is a circularly permuted version of Venus rather than EYFP (Nagai et al., 2002). YC3.60 has a monophasic Ca2+ dependency with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 0.25 μm. Compared with YC3.1, YC3.60 is equally bright with a 5- to 6-fold larger dynamic range. Thus, YC3.60 results in a markedly enhanced signal-to-noise ratio, thereby enabling Ca2+ imaging experiments that were not possible with conventional YCs. On the other hand, YC4.60 was developed by mutating the Ca2+-binding loop of CaM in YC3.60. Because YC4.60 has a significantly lower Ca2+ affinity with a biphasic Ca2+ dependency (Kd: 58 nm and 14.4 μm), it allows changes in [Ca2+] dynamics to be detected against a high background [Ca2+] (Nagai et al., 2004).To examine whether the [Ca2+]cyt oscillates in pollen tubes growing through a stigma after pollination (in vivo condition), in those placed in germination medium immediately after passing through a style (semi-in vivo condition), or in those grown in germination medium (in vitro condition), we generated transgenic Arabidopsis and N. tabacum lines expressing the YC3.60 gene in their pollen grains and monitored Ca2+ dynamics in the pollen tube tip. We also examined how inhibitors of pollen tube growth affect Ca2+ dynamics in pollen tubes growing under the semi-in vivo condition. To examine Ca2+ dynamics in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing YC4.60 in the pollen tube ER. The results are discussed in relation to the physiological relevance of [Ca2+] oscillations for pollen tube growth.  相似文献   

8.
Dysregulation of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis may underlie amyloid β peptide (Aβ) toxicity in Alzheimer''s Disease (AD) but the mechanism is unknown. In search for this mechanism we found that Aβ1–42 oligomers, the assembly state correlating best with cognitive decline in AD, but not Aβ fibrils, induce a massive entry of Ca2+ in neurons and promote mitochondrial Ca2+ overload as shown by bioluminescence imaging of targeted aequorin in individual neurons. Aβ oligomers induce also mitochondrial permeability transition, cytochrome c release, apoptosis and cell death. Mitochondrial depolarization prevents mitochondrial Ca2+ overload, cytochrome c release and cell death. In addition, we found that a series of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) including salicylate, sulindac sulfide, indomethacin, ibuprofen and R-flurbiprofen depolarize mitochondria and inhibit mitochondrial Ca2+ overload, cytochrome c release and cell death induced by Aβ oligomers. Our results indicate that i) mitochondrial Ca2+ overload underlies the neurotoxicity induced by Aβ oligomers and ii) inhibition of mitochondrial Ca2+ overload provides a novel mechanism of neuroprotection by NSAIDs against Aβ oligomers and AD.  相似文献   

9.
Mitochondria act as potent buffers of intracellular Ca2+ in many cells, but a more active role in modulating the generation of Ca2+ signals is not well established. We have investigated the ability of mitochondria to modulate store-operated or “capacitative” Ca2+ entry in Jurkat leukemic T cells and human T lymphocytes using fluorescence imaging techniques. Depletion of the ER Ca2+ store with thapsigargin (TG) activates Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) channels in T cells, and the ensuing influx of Ca2+ loads a TG- insensitive intracellular store that by several criteria appears to be mitochondria. Loading of this store is prevented by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone or by antimycin A1 + oligomycin, agents that are known to inhibit mitochondrial Ca2+ import by dissipating the mitochondrial membrane potential. Conversely, intracellular Na+ depletion, which inhibits Na+-dependent Ca2+ export from mitochondria, enhances store loading. In addition, we find that rhod-2 labels mitochondria in T cells, and it reports changes in Ca2+ levels that are consistent with its localization in the TG-insensitive store. Ca2+ uptake by the mitochondrial store is sensitive (threshold is <400 nM cytosolic Ca2+), rapid (detectable within 8 s), and does not readily saturate. The rate of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake is sensitive to extracellular [Ca2+], indicating that mitochondria sense Ca2+ gradients near CRAC channels. Remarkably, mitochondrial uncouplers or Na+ depletion prevent the ability of T cells to maintain a high rate of capacitative Ca2+ entry over prolonged periods of >10 min. Under these conditions, the rate of Ca2+ influx in single cells undergoes abrupt transitions from a high influx to a low influx state. These results demonstrate that mitochondria not only buffer the Ca2+ that enters T cells via store-operated Ca2+ channels, but also play an active role in modulating the rate of capacitative Ca2+ entry.  相似文献   

10.
This study presents an investigation of pacemaker mechanisms underlying lymphatic vasomotion. We tested the hypothesis that active inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R)-operated Ca2+ stores interact as coupled oscillators to produce near-synchronous Ca2+ release events and associated pacemaker potentials, this driving action potentials and constrictions of lymphatic smooth muscle. Application of endothelin 1 (ET-1), an agonist known to enhance synthesis of IP3, to quiescent lymphatic smooth muscle syncytia first enhanced spontaneous Ca2+ transients and/or intracellular Ca2+ waves. Larger near-synchronous Ca2+ transients then occurred leading to global synchronous Ca2+ transients associated with action potentials and resultant vasomotion. In contrast, blockade of L-type Ca2+ channels with nifedipine prevented ET-1 from inducing near-synchronous Ca2+ transients and resultant action potentials, leaving only asynchronous Ca2+ transients and local Ca2+ waves. These data were well simulated by a model of lymphatic smooth muscle with: 1), oscillatory Ca2+ release from IP3R-operated Ca2+ stores, which causes depolarization; 2), L-type Ca2+ channels; and 3), gap junctions between cells. Stimulation of the stores caused global pacemaker activity through coupled oscillator-based entrainment of the stores. Membrane potential changes and positive feedback by L-type Ca2+ channels to produce more store activity were fundamental to this process providing long-range electrochemical coupling between the Ca2+ store oscillators. We conclude that lymphatic pacemaking is mediated by coupled oscillator-based interactions between active Ca2+ stores. These are weakly coupled by inter- and intracellular diffusion of store activators and strongly coupled by membrane potential. Ca2+ store-based pacemaking is predicted for cellular systems where: 1), oscillatory Ca2+ release induces depolarization; 2), membrane depolarization provides positive feedback to induce further store Ca2+ release; and 3), cells are interconnected. These conditions are met in a surprisingly large number of cellular systems including gastrointestinal, lymphatic, urethral, and vascular tissues, and in heart pacemaker cells.  相似文献   

11.
We present unexpected and novel results revealing that glutamate-dependent oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) of brain mitochondria is exclusively and efficiently activated by extramitochondrial Ca2+ in physiological concentration ranges (S0.5 = 360 nM Ca2+). This regulation was not affected by RR, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter. Active respiration is regulated by glutamate supply to mitochondria via aralar, a mitochondrial glutamate/aspartate carrier with regulatory Ca2+-binding sites in the mitochondrial intermembrane space providing full access to cytosolic Ca2+. At micromolar concentrations, Ca2+ can also enter the intramitochondrial matrix and activate specific dehydrogenases. However, the latter mechanism is less efficient than extramitochondrial Ca2+ regulation of respiration/OXPHOS via aralar. These results imply a new mode of glutamate-dependent OXPHOS regulation as a demand-driven regulation of mitochondrial function. This regulation involves the mitochondrial glutamate/aspartate carrier aralar which controls mitochondrial substrate supply according to the level of extramitochondrial Ca2+.  相似文献   

12.
ICRAC (the best characterized Ca2+ current activated by store depletion) was monitored concurrently for the first time with [Ca2+] changes in internal stores. To establish the quantitative and kinetic relationship between these two parameters, we have developed a novel means to clamp [Ca2+] within stores of intact cells at any level. The advantage of this approach, which is based on the membrane-permeant low-affinity Ca2+ chelator N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis (2-pyridylmethyl)ethylene diamine (TPEN), is that [Ca2+] within the ER can be lowered and restored to its original level within 10–15 s without modifications of Ca2+ pumps or release channels. Using these new tools, we demonstrate here that Ca2+ release–activated Ca2+ current (ICRAC) is activated (a) solely by reduction of free [Ca2+] within the ER and (b) by any measurable decrease in [Ca2+]ER. We also demonstrate that the intrinsic kinetics of inactivation are relatively slow and possibly dependent on soluble factors that are lost during the whole-cell recording.  相似文献   

13.
In leaves of Egeria densa Planchon, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and other sulfhydryl-binding reagents induce a temporary increase in nonmitochondrial respiration (ΔQO2) that is inhibited by diphenylene iodonium and quinacrine, two known inhibitors of the plasma membrane NADPH oxidase, and are associated with a relevant increase in electrolyte leakage (M. Bellando, S. Sacco, F. Albergoni, P. Rocco, M.T. Marré [1997] Bot Acta 110: 388–394). In this paper we report data indicating further analogies between the oxidative burst induced by sulfhydryl blockers in E. densa and that induced by pathogen-derived elicitors in animal and plant cells: (a) NEM- and Ag+-induced ΔQO2 was associated with H2O2 production and both effects depended on the presence of external Ca2+; (b) Ca2+ influx was markedly increased by treatment with NEM; (c) the Ca2+ channel blocker LaCl3 inhibited ΔQO2, electrolyte release, and membrane depolarization induced by the sulfhydryl reagents; and (d) LaCl3 also inhibited electrolyte leakage induced by the direct infiltration of the leaves with H2O2. These results suggest a model in which the interaction of sulfhydryl blockers with sulfhydryl groups of cell components would primarily induce an increase in the Ca2+ cytosolic concentration, followed by membrane depolarization and activation of a plasma membrane NADPH oxidase. This latter effect, producing active oxygen species, might further influence plasma membrane permeability, leading to the massive release of electrolytes from the tissue.  相似文献   

14.
Oxidative Damage in Pea Plants Exposed to Water Deficit or Paraquat   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24       下载免费PDF全文
Enhanced Cl efflux during acidosis in plants is thought to play a role in cytosolic pH (pHc) homeostasis by short-circuiting the current produced by the electrogenic H+ pump, thereby facilitating enhanced H+ efflux from the cytosol. Using an intracellular perfusion technique, which enables experimental control of medium composition at the cytosolic surface of the plasma membrane of charophyte algae (Chara corallina), we show that lowered pHc activates Cl efflux via two mechanisms. The first is a direct effect of pHc on Cl efflux; the second mechanism comprises a pHc-induced increase in affinity for cytosolic free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]c), which also activates Cl efflux. Cl efflux was controlled by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation events, which override the responses to both pHc and [Ca2+]c. Whereas phosphorylation (perfusion with the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A in the presence of ATP) resulted in a complete inhibition of Cl efflux, dephosphorylation (perfusion with alkaline phosphatase) arrested Cl efflux at 60% of the maximal level in a manner that was both pHc and [Ca2+]c independent. These findings imply that plasma membrane anion channels play a central role in pHc regulation in plants, in addition to their established roles in turgor/volume regulation and signal transduction.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the mechanisms of excitation-contraction (EC) coupling in human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hESC-CMs) and fetal ventricular myocytes (hFVMs) using patch-clamp electrophysiology and confocal microscopy. We tested the hypothesis that Ca2+ influx via voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels activates Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) via a local control mechanism in hESC-CMs and hFVMs. Field-stimulated, whole-cell [Ca2+]i transients in hESC-CMs required Ca2+ entry through L-type Ca2+ channels, as evidenced by the elimination of such transients by either removal of extracellular Ca2+ or treatment with diltiazem, an L-type channel inhibitor. Ca2+ release from the SR also contributes to the [Ca2+]i transient in these cells, as evidenced by studies with drugs interfering with either SR Ca2+ release (i.e. ryanodine and caffeine) or reuptake (i.e. thapsigargin and cyclopiazonic acid). As in adult ventricular myocytes, membrane depolarization evoked large L-type Ca2+ currents (I Ca) and corresponding whole-cell [Ca2+]i transients in hESC-CMs and hFVMs, and the amplitude of both I Ca and the [Ca2+]i transients were finely graded by the magnitude of the depolarization. hESC-CMs exhibit a decreasing EC coupling gain with depolarization to more positive test potentials, “tail” [Ca2+]i transients upon repolarization from extremely positive test potentials, and co-localized ryanodine and sarcolemmal L-type Ca2+ channels, all findings that are consistent with the local control hypothesis. Finally, we recorded Ca2+ sparks in hESC-CMs and hFVMs. Collectively, these data support a model in which tight, local control of SR Ca2+ release by the I Ca during EC coupling develops early in human cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

16.
In Paramecium tetraurelia, polyamine-triggered exocytosis is accompanied by the activation of Ca2+-activated currents across the cell membrane (Erxleben, C., and H. Plattner. 1994. J. Cell Biol. 127:935– 945). We now show by voltage clamp and extracellular recordings that the product of current × time (As) closely parallels the number of exocytotic events. We suggest that Ca2+ mobilization from subplasmalemmal storage compartments, covering almost the entire cell surface, is a key event. In fact, after local stimulation, Ca2+ imaging with high time resolution reveals rapid, transient, local signals even when extracellular Ca2+ is quenched to or below resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]e [Ca2+]i). Under these conditions, quenched-flow/freeze-fracture analysis shows that membrane fusion is only partially inhibited. Increasing [Ca2+]e alone, i.e., without secretagogue, causes rapid, strong cortical increase of [Ca2+]i but no exocytosis. In various cells, the ratio of maximal vs. minimal currents registered during maximal stimulation or single exocytotic events, respectively, correlate nicely with the number of Ca stores available. Since no quantal current steps could be observed, this is again compatible with the combined occurrence of Ca2+ mobilization from stores (providing close to threshold Ca2+ levels) and Ca2+ influx from the medium (which per se does not cause exocytosis). This implies that only the combination of Ca2+ flushes, primarily from internal and secondarily from external sources, can produce a signal triggering rapid, local exocytotic responses, as requested for Paramecium defense.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial alterations are critically involved in increased vulnerability to disease during aging. We investigated the contribution of mitochondria–sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) communication in cardiomyocyte functional alterations during aging. Heart function (echocardiography) and ATP/phosphocreatine (NMR spectroscopy) were preserved in hearts from old mice (>20 months) with respect to young mice (5–6 months). Mitochondrial membrane potential and resting O2 consumption were similar in mitochondria from young and old hearts. However, maximal ADP-stimulated O2 consumption was specifically reduced in interfibrillar mitochondria from aged hearts. Second generation proteomics disclosed an increased mitochondrial protein oxidation in advanced age. Because energy production and oxidative status are regulated by mitochondrial Ca2+, we investigated the effect of age on mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. Although no age-dependent differences were found in Ca2+ uptake kinetics in isolated mitochondria, mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake secondary to SR Ca2+ release was significantly reduced in cardiomyocytes from old hearts, and this effect was associated with decreased NAD(P)H regeneration and increased mitochondrial ROS upon increased contractile activity. Immunofluorescence and proximity ligation assay identified the defective communication between mitochondrial voltage-dependent anion channel and SR ryanodine receptor (RyR) in cardiomyocytes from aged hearts associated with altered Ca2+ handling. Age-dependent alterations in SR Ca2+ transfer to mitochondria and in Ca2+ handling could be reproduced in cardiomyoctes from young hearts after interorganelle disruption with colchicine, at concentrations that had no effect in aged cardiomyocytes or isolated mitochondria. Thus, defective SR–mitochondria communication underlies inefficient interorganelle Ca2+ exchange that contributes to energy demand/supply mistmach and oxidative stress in the aged heart.Age is the main independent risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.1 It increases heart vulnerability to cardiac diseases as well as the severity of their clinical manifestations, and reduces the efficacy of cardioprotective interventions.2 At the cellular level, some of the structural and functional age-dependent changes resemble those of failing cardiac myocytes.3, 4 Specifically, disturbed Ca2+ homeostasis and excitation–contraction coupling,5 as well as deficient mitochondrial energetics6 and excessive ROS production,7 have been consistently reported in senescent cardiomyocytes. These subcellular alterations likely contribute to the reduced adaptive capacity to stress (exercise, β-adrenergic stimulation) and increased vulnerability to disease of the aged hearts.In cardiac cells, electrochemical coupling and metabolic adaptations are based upon the coordination between sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and mitochondria tightly interconnected forming an interface to support local ionic exchange and signal transduction in a beat-to-beat basis.8 This privileged interorganelle communication facilitates mitochondrial ATP transport for SR Ca2+ cycling and ensures energy replenishment by reciprocal Ca2+ and ADP exchange. Ca2+ is taken up by mitochondria using a low-affinity uniporter whose activity is driven by the elevated Ca2+ concentration in the microenvironment present around ryanodine receptors (RyR).9 Indeed, the kinetics of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake is more dependent on the concentration of Ca2+ at the SR–mitochondria contact points than on bulk cytosolic Ca2+ concentration.8 Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake allows energy supply–demand matching through the activation of Krebs cycle dehydrogenases and electron transport chain activity, and at the same time it regulates the regeneration of Krebs-coupled antioxidative defenses (NAD(P)H).10Defective SR–mitochondria cross talk has been causally linked to the abnormal mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake in failing hearts and may underlie their increased oxidative stress.11 Also, in diabetic cardiomyopathy, intracellular Ca2+ overload and depletion of energy stores appear to develop as a consequence of sequential SR–mitochondria dysfunction.12 Atrial fibrillation has been associated with an increased fusion of mitochondria and a subsequent increased colocalization of giant mitochondria with SR, a subcellular remodeling process that contributes to the perpetuation of the arrhythmia.13 Because mitochondria are highly dynamic structures, some molecular links have been proposed to provide a stable physical interorganelle bridge14, 15 while others appear to facilitate direct tunneling of Ca2+ and other signaling mediators.16 In the present study, we hypothesized that aging may negatively impact on mitochondria–SR communication by mechanisms involving defective Ca2+ transmission, and we identified reduced physical interaction between RyR and mitochondrial voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) as the main responsible of this effect.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibition of the mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCLX) by CGP37157 is protective in models of neuronal injury that involve disruption of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. However, the Ca2+ signaling pathways and stores underlying neuroprotection by that inhibitor are not well defined. In the present study, we analyzed how intracellular Ca2+ levels are modulated by CGP37157 (10 μM) during NMDA insults in primary cultures of rat cortical neurons. We initially assessed the presence of NCLX in mitochondria of cultured neurons by immunolabeling, and subsequently, we analyzed the effects of CGP37157 on neuronal Ca2+ homeostasis using cameleon-based mitochondrial Ca2+ and cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) live imaging. We observed that NCLX-driven mitochondrial Ca2+ exchange occurs in cortical neurons under basal conditions as CGP37157 induced a decrease in [Ca2]i concomitant with a Ca2+ accumulation inside the mitochondria. In turn, CGP37157 also inhibited mitochondrial Ca2+ efflux after the stimulation of acetylcholine receptors. In contrast, CGP37157 strongly prevented depolarization-induced [Ca2+]i increase by blocking voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs), whereas it did not induce depletion of ER Ca2+ stores. Moreover, mitochondrial Ca2+ overload was reduced as a consequence of diminished Ca2+ entry through VGCCs. The decrease in cytosolic and mitochondrial Ca2+ overload by CGP37157 resulted in a reduction of excitotoxic mitochondrial damage, characterized here by a reduction in mitochondrial membrane depolarization, oxidative stress and calpain activation. In summary, our results provide evidence that during excitotoxicity CGP37157 modulates cytosolic and mitochondrial Ca2+ dynamics that leads to attenuation of NMDA-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal cell death by blocking VGCCs.  相似文献   

19.
The bulge region of HIV-1 TAR RNA binds metal ions in solution   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Binding of Mg2+, Ca2+ and Co(NH3)63+ ions to the HIV-1 TAR RNA in solution was analysed by 19F NMR spectroscopy, metal ion-induced RNA cleavages and Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations. Chemically synthesised 29mer oligoribonucleotides of the TAR sequence labelled with 5-fluorouridine (FU) were used for 19F NMR-monitored metal ion titration. The chemical shift changes of fluorine resonances FU-23, FU-25 and FU-40 upon titration with Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions indicated specific, although weak, binding at the bulge region with the dissociation constants (Kd) of 0.9 ± 0.6 and 2.7 ± 1.7 mM, respectively. Argininamide, inducing largest 19F chemical shifts changes at FU-23, was used as a reference ligand (Kd = 0.3 ± 0.1 mM). In the Pb2+-induced TAR RNA cleavage experiment, strong and selective cleavage of the C24-U25 phosphodiester bond was observed, while Mg2+ and Ca2+ induced cuts at all 3-nt residues of the bulge. The inhibition of Pb2+-specific TAR cleavage by di- and trivalent metal ions revealed a binding specificity [in the order Co(NH3)63+ > Mg2+ > Ca2+] at the bulge site. A BD simulation search of potential magnesium ion sites within the NMR structure of HIV-1 TAR RNA was conducted on a set of 20 conformers (PDB code 1ANR). For most cases, the bulge region was targeted by magnesium cations.  相似文献   

20.
The [PSI+] prion causes widespread readthrough translation and is rare in natural populations of Saccharomyces, despite the fact that sex is expected to cause it to spread. Using the recently estimated rate of Saccharomyces outcrossing, we calculate the strength of selection necessary to maintain [PSI+] at levels low enough to be compatible with data. Using the best available parameter estimates, we find selection against [PSI+] to be significant. Inference regarding selection on modifiers of [PSI+] appearance depends on obtaining more precise and accurate estimates of the product of yeast effective population size Ne and the spontaneous rate of [PSI+] appearance m. The ability to form [PSI+] has persisted in yeast over a long period of evolutionary time, despite a diversity of modifiers that could abolish it. If mNe < 1, this may be explained by insufficiently strong selection. If mNe > 1, then selection should favor the spread of [PSI+] resistance modifiers. In this case, rare conditions where [PSI+] is adaptive may permit its persistence in the face of negative selection.  相似文献   

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