Intercellular signaling as visualized by endogenous calcium-dependent bioluminescence |
| |
Authors: | P Brehm J Lechleiter S Smith K Dunlap |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Physiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111. |
| |
Abstract: | Bioluminescence in the hydrozoan coelenterate Obelia results from calcium activation of a photoprotein contained in light-emitting cells (photocytes) scattered in the animal's endoderm. The influx of calcium into nonluminescent endodermal cells through conventional voltage-dependent calcium channels is required for the excitation-luminescence coupling. Our results suggest that the subsequent diffusion of this calcium, via gap junctions, into the neighboring photocytes triggers a localized luminescence response. Following intense stimulation, the local rise in calcium elicits a secondary wave of luminescence that is supported by a voltage-independent calcium permeability mechanism in the photocyte plasma membrane. These two mechanisms for elevating internal calcium in light-emitting cells can account for the spatial and temporal features of intracellular luminescence in Obelia. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|