Publication | Open Access
Differential effects of parathyroid hormone and its analogues on cytosolic calcium ion and cAMP levels in cultured rat osteoblast-like cells.
100
Citations
22
References
1988
Year
While the stimulatory effect of parathyroid hormone (PTH) on osteoblast-like cell adenylate cyclase is well known, the effect of PTH on cytosolic calcium ion ([Ca2+]i) mobilization is controversial, one group finding no effect but others reporting various increases. We investigated the effects on [Ca2+]i of synthetic rat PTH fragment 1-34 (rPTH(1-34)) and two bovine PTH analogues that inhibit PTH's stimulation of adenylate cyclase (bovine 8,18Nle, 34Tyr-PTH(3-34) and 34Tyr-PTH(7-34]. [Ca2+]i was measured before, during, and after exposure to PTH analogues in perifused, attached osteoblast-like rat osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8) that had been scrape-loaded with the luminescent photoprotein aequorin. Resting [Ca2+]i was 0.094 +/- 0.056 microM (mean +/- S.D., n = 103) and rose in a time- and dose-specific way after exposure to rPTH(1-34). At 10(-10) M rPTH(1-34), [Ca2+]i rose 100% within 30 s to a plateau; higher concentrations of PTH yielded increasing initial peaks of [Ca2+]i followed by lower plateaus. At 10(-6) M, the initial peak was 5-fold basal, or 0.64 +/- 0.07 microM. Both analogues of PTH were at least partial agonists for [Ca2+]i mobilization and did not reduce peak [Ca2+]i when co-perifused with rPTH(1-34). However, the analogues did reduce significantly rPTH(1-34)-induced cAMP accumulation and did not increase cAMP accumulation by themselves. Thus, rPTH(1-34) strongly mobilizes [Ca2+]i in ROS 17/2.8 cells, at near-physiologic concentrations. Failure of the PTH analogues to block the effect of PTH on [Ca2+]i while inhibiting the effect on cAMP accumulation suggests separate pathways for PTH activation of adenylate cyclase and mobilization of calcium.
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