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Extracellular ATP activates receptor‐operated cation channels in mouse lacrimal acinar cells to promote calcium influx in the absence of phosphoinositide metabolism

87

Citations

19

References

1990

Year

Abstract

In exocrine acinar cells a variety of neurotransmitters (e.g. acetylcholine) stimulate phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate hydrolysis elevating intracellular calcium to activate calcium-dependent membrane currents (outward K+ and inward Cl-). This study shows that in lacrimal acinar cells extracellular application of ATP is also associated with outward and inward current responses; these, however, are not the result of phosphoinositide metabolism. ATP directly activates receptor-operated cation channels which permit influx of Na+ and Ca+ (the inward current). The elevation in [Ca2+]i which results is sufficient to activate the outward K+ current. ATP thus promotes Ca+ influx in the absence of phosphoinositide metabolism.

References

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