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Cellular responses to Ca2+ from extracellular and intracellular sources are different as shown by simultaneous measurements of cytosolic Ca2+ and secretion from bovine chromaffin cells.

137

Citations

18

References

1989

Year

Abstract

Bovine adrenal medullary cells, cultured on quartz plates, were superfused with buffer to which pulses of stimulant were added. Cytosolic Ca2+ was measured by the fura-2 fluorescence method and the simultaneously released catecholamine was measured electrochemically. When stimulant concentrations were adjusted to given equivalent elevations of cytosolic Ca2+, secretion depended entirely on whether Ca2+ came from internal stores or from the extracellular medium. Calcium from internal stores did not support secretion under these conditions. This nonequivalence of the two sources of cytosolic Ca2+ points to important differences in the physiological roles of the two sources of calcium. Dimethylphenylpiperazinium (a cholinergic agonist) and elevated K+ increased cytosolic Ca2+ and caused secretion only in the presence of external Ca2+. Bradykinin, muscarine, and ATP elevated cytosolic Ca2+ in the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+ but caused secretion only in the presence of extracellular Ca2+. UTP, which in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ elevated cytosolic Ca2+ as effectively as ATP, did not cause detectable secretion under any circumstance. Because of the high Ca2+-buffering capacity of the cytosol, we expected that Ca2+ gradients, perhaps quite steep, would be produced by a pulse of Ca2+ entering the cytosol. Fura-2 fluorescence measures only the average free cytosolic Ca2+. Our data show that Ca2+ entering across the plasma membrane was much more effective at triggering exocytosis than was Ca2+ released from internal stores, suggesting that the two sources of Ca2+ are effectively compartmentalized, probably by concentration gradients in the cytosol.

References

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