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 15 毫秒
1.
Excitation-contraction coupling in smooth muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
  相似文献   

2.
3.
4.
We have investigated the links between electrical excitation and contraction in mammalian heart muscle. Using isolated single cells from adult rat ventricle, a whole-cell voltage-clamp technique and quantitative fluorescence microscopy, we have measured simultaneously calcium current (Ica) and [Ca2+]i (with fura-2). We find that the voltage-dependence of Ica and the [Ca 2+]i-transient and the dependence of [Ca2+]i-transient on depolarization-duration cannot both be readily explained by a simple calcium-induced Ca-release (CICR) mechanism. Additionally, we find that when [Ca2+]i and [Na+]i are at their diastolic levels, activation of the Na-Ca exchange mechanism by depolarization does not measurably trigger the release of Ca2+i. Finally, measuring Ica in adult and neonatal rat heart cells and using the alkaloid ryanodine, we have carried out complementary experiments. These experiments show that there may be an action of ryanodine on Ica that is independent of [Ca2+]i and independent of a direct action of the alkaloid on the calcium channel itself. Along with experiments of others showing that ryanodine binds to the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium-release channel/spanning protein complex, our data suggests a model to explain our findings. The model links the calcium channels responsible for Ica to the sarcoplasmic reticulum by means of one or more of the spanning protein(s). Information from the calcium channel can be communitated to the sarcoplasmic reticulum by this route and, presumably, information can move in the opposite direction from the sarcoplasmic reticulum to the calcium channel.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We investigated the mechanisms that underlie the responses to norepinephrine (NE) and thromboxane (Tx) A(2) (TxA2) in the canine pulmonary vasculature with fura 2 fluorimetric, intracellular microelectrode, and force transduction techniques. KCl, caffeine, and cyclopiazonic acid elevated intracellular Ca2+ concentration levels and tone, indicating that Ca2+ mobilization is sufficient to produce contraction. However, contractions evoked by NE or the TxA2 mimetic U-46619 were unaffected by nifedipine or by omitting external Ca2+ and were reduced only partially by depleting the internal Ca2+ store; furthermore, NE-evoked depolarization was subthreshold for voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents. Agonist-evoked contractions were insensitive to inhibitors of protein kinase C (calphostin C and chelerythrine), mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (PD-98059), and p38 kinase (SB-203580) but were abolished by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein and the Rho kinase inhibitor Y-27632. We conclude that, although Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ release are sufficient for contraction, they are not necessary for adrenergic or TxA2 contractions. Instead, excitation-contraction coupling involves the activation of tyrosine kinase and Rho kinase, leading to enhanced Ca2+ sensitivity of the contractile apparatus.  相似文献   

7.
According to the current views the direct and indispensable source of Ca2+ activating contraction is sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Ca2+ is released from the SR when its release channels (ryanodine receptors) are activated by Ca2+ influx through the L-type Ca2+ channels (dihydropyridine receptors). In contrast, ryanodine receptors of skeletal muscles are activated by conformational changes in dihydropyridine receptors induced by sarcolemmal voltage. Ca2+ influx is not necessary for their activation. In this review the papers not quite conforming with the current views are referred to and discussed. Their results suggest that SR is not an indispensable source of contractile Ca2+ at least in some mammalian species, and that cardiac ryanodine receptors may be activated by conformational changes in dihydropyridine receptors without Ca2+ influx (like in skeletal muscle). This may be a mechanism parallel to or accessory to the Ca2+ induced release of Ca2+ (CIRC).  相似文献   

8.
9.
The primary complaints from patients with asthma pertain to function of airway smooth muscle (ASM) function including shortness of breath, wheezing, and coughing. Thus, it is imperative to better understand the mechanisms underlying excitation-contraction coupling in ASM. Here, we review the various signaling pathways underlying contraction in ASM, and then examine how these are altered in asthma and airway hyperresponsiveness (a hallmark feature of asthma). Throughout, we highlight how studies of vascular smooth muscle have helped or hindered progress in understanding ASM physiology and pathophysiology.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Noradrenaline (5 x 10(-8) - 10(-5) M) induced a dose-dependent contraction of muscle strips from rabbit femoral artery. At concentrations higher than 10(-7) M noradrenaline evoked also a depolarization of smooth muscle cells due to an increase in sodium and/or chloride permeability of the membrane. Repolarization of the membrane to original level by inwardly applied current resulted in restoration of membrane resistance and partial relaxation of noradrenaline-evoked contraction. The same part of contraction was also blocked by verapamil. In calcium-free EGTA-containing solution noradrenaline induced only a small transient contraction. These findings indicate that noradrenaline-activated sodium (or chloride) permeability is voltage dependent. Noradrenaline evoked contraction is activated by calcium ions entered the cell through receptor-operated and partly through voltage-operated calcium channels.  相似文献   

12.
In airway smooth muscle (ASM), ACh induces propagating intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) oscillations (5-30 Hz). We hypothesized that, in ASM, coupling of elevations and reductions in [Ca2+]i to force generation and relaxation (excitation-contraction coupling) is slower than ACh-induced [Ca2+]i oscillations, leading to stable force generation. When we used real-time confocal imaging, the delay between elevated [Ca2+]i and contraction in intact porcine ASM cells was found to be approximately 450 ms. In beta-escin-permeabilized ASM strips, photolytic release of caged Ca2+ resulted in force generation after approximately 800 ms. When calmodulin (CaM) was added, this delay was shortened to approximately 500 ms. In the presence of exogenous CaM and 100 microM Ca2+, photolytic release of caged ATP led to force generation after approximately 80 ms. These results indicated significant delays due to CaM mobilization and Ca2+-CaM activation of myosin light chain kinase but much shorter delays introduced by myosin light chain kinase-induced phosphorylation of the regulatory myosin light chain MLC20 and cross-bridge recruitment. This was confirmed by prior thiophosphorylation of MLC20, in which force generation occurred approximately 50 ms after photolytic release of caged ATP, approximating the delay introduced by cross-bridge recruitment alone. The time required to reach maximum steady-state force was >15 s. Rapid chelation of [Ca2+]i after photolytic release of caged diazo-2 resulted in relaxation after a delay of approximately 1.2 s and 50% reduction in force after approximately 57 s. We conclude that in ASM cells agonist-induced [Ca2+]i oscillations are temporally and spatially integrated during excitation-contraction coupling, resulting in stable force production.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated theoretically and experimentally the Ca2+-contraction coupling in rat tracheal smooth muscle. [Ca2+]i, isometric contraction and myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation were measured in response to 1 mM carbachol. Theoretical modeling consisted in coupling a model of Ca2+-dependent MLC kinase (MLCK) activation with a four-state model of smooth muscle contractile apparatus. Stimulation resulted in a short-time contraction obtained within 1 min, followed by a long-time contraction up to the maximal force obtained in 30 min. ML-7 and Wortmannin (MLCK inhibitors) abolished the contraction. Chelerythrine (PKC inhibitor) did not change the short-time, but reduced the long-time contraction. [Ca2+ i responses of isolated myocytes recorded during the first 90 s consisted in a fast peak, followed by a plateau phase and, in 28% of the cells, superimposed Ca2+ oscillations. MLC phosphorylation was maximal at 5 s and then decreased whereas isometric contraction followed a Hill-shaped curve. The model properly predicts the time course of MLC phosphorylation and force of the short-time response. With oscillating Ca2+ signal, the predicted force does not oscillate. According to the model, the amplitude of the plateau and the frequency of oscillations encode for the amplitude of force, whereas the peak encodes for force velocity. The long-time phase of the contraction, associated with a second increase in MLC phosphorylation, may be explained, at least partially, by MLC phosphatase (MLCP) inhibition, possibly via PKC inhibition.  相似文献   

14.
Single crab (Callinectes danae) fibers were equilibrated with isotonic, high KCl solutions and were subsequently returned to the control saline. This caused marked swelling of the T tubules. Fibers treated with 100 mM KCl had a 2.5-mV residual depolarization, a 50% decrease in effective membrane resistance (Reff) and a 75% reduction in membrane time constant (tau m). These fibers exhibited large increases in membrane conductance upon depolarization and were inexcitable; membrane depolarization with current pulses elicited no contraction. The effects of the KCl treatment on membrane properties were not reproduced by treatment with high potassium gluconate solutions, which did not cause tubular swelling. Tetrabutylammonium (10 mM) or Ba ions (10-20 mM), but not tetraethylammonium (40-100 mM), Sr ions (15-70 mM), or procaine (1-8 mM) reversed the effects of the KCl treatment on Reff, tau m, membrane excitability, and excitation-contraction coupling. The time course of the Ba effects was consistent with the suggestion that the KCl treatment increases the K conductance of the tubular membranes, which in turn prevents the activation of voltage-dependent Ca channels located in the membranes of the T system. This results in inhibition of the Ca-dependent electrogenesis and consequently, the absence of contraction upon depolarization of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We investigated the possible electrophysiological basis for the slow, prolonged force generation by airway smooth muscle (ASM) produced by leukotriene C4 (LTC4). Preparations of ASM were made from ferret trachea and placed in tissue microchambers for study. Some of these preparations were arranged so that force transducers and intracellular microelectrodes (with tip resistances of 30-80 M omega) could be used to measure isometric force and cell membrane potential (Em) simultaneously from ASM cells stimulated by LTC4. We found that ferret tracheal muscle was relatively sensitive to LTC4 and that this sensitivity was not significantly affected by atropine (1 microM), phentolamine (1 microM), propranolol (3 microM), and pyrilamine (1 microM). In a 1 nM solution of LTC4, Em was -54.0 +/- 1.2 mV from 18 impalements (n) from 6 animals (N) compared with a base-line value of -61.6 +/- 0.8 mV (n/N = 29/8, P less than 0.0005). This change did not lead to force generation, however. Higher concentrations of LTC4 led to progressive decreases in Em to which force generation was closely coupled. Concentrations greater than or equal to 70 nM led to phasic oscillations in Em of 0.6-0.8 Hz and 1.7 mV in amplitude, which were abolished by 10 microM verapamil, although the base-line Em was unaffected by this concentration. Although 300 nM LTE4 by itself caused only a small depolarization of ferret trachealis, it substantially antagonized the electromechanical responsiveness of this smooth muscle to LTC4. We conclude that ferret ASM is relatively sensitive to LTC4 and that there is an electrical basis for the slow, prolonged force generation caused by this mediator.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Neurally derived tachykinins such as substance P (SP) play a key role in modulating airway contractility (especially with inflammation). Separately, the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF; potentially derived from nerves as well as airway smooth muscle; ASM) and its tropomyosin-related kinase receptor, TrkB, are involved in enhanced airway contractility. In this study, we hypothesized that neurokinins and neurotrophins are linked in enhancing intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) regulation in ASM. In rat ASM cells, 24 h exposure to 10 nM SP significantly increased BDNF and TrkB expression (P < 0.05). Furthermore, [Ca(2+)](i) responses to 1 μM ACh as well as BDNF (30 min) effects on [Ca(2+)](i) regulation were enhanced by prior SP exposure, largely via increased Ca(2+) influx (P < 0.05). The enhancing effect of SP on BDNF signaling was blunted by the neurokinin-2 receptor antagonist MEN-10376 (1 μM, P < 0.05) to a greater extent than the neurokinin-1 receptor antagonist RP-67580 (5 nM). Chelation of extracellular BDNF (chimeric TrkB-F(c); 1 μg/ml), as well as tyrosine kinase inhibition (100 nM K252a), substantially blunted SP effects (P < 0.05). Overnight (24 h) exposure of ASM cells to 50% oxygen increased BDNF and TrkB expression and potentiated both SP- and BDNF-induced enhancement of [Ca(2+)](i) (P < 0.05). These results suggest a novel interaction between SP and BDNF in regulating agonist-induced [Ca(2+)](i) regulation in ASM. The autocrine mechanism we present here represents a new area in the development of bronchoconstrictive reflex response and airway hyperreactive disorders.  相似文献   

20.
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