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Calcium Uptake and Catecholamine Secretion by Cultured Bovine Adrenal Medulla Cells
180
Citations
22
References
1982
Year
Calcium EntryPharmacotherapyCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesAdrenal Medulla CellsAdrenal GlandHyperpolarization (Biology)NicotineNeuroendocrine MechanismCatecholamine SecretionCalcium UptakeNeurochemistryAnimal PhysiologyBiochemistryNeuropharmacologyAdrenal DiseaseNervous SystemEndocrinologyPharmacologyNeurophysiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyMedicinePharmacokinetics
The uptake of 45Ca2+ and secretion of catecholamines by primary cultures of adrenal medulla cells were studied. Nicotine, veratridine, potassium, and Ionomycin stimulate both the accumulation of 45Ca2+ and the secretion of catecholamines. Nicotinic antagonists block 45Ca2+ uptake induced by nicotine, tetrodotoxin blocks 45Ca2+ uptake induced by veratridine, and D600 or secretion induced by Ionomycin. The EC50 for nicotine is 3 microM for catecholamine secretion and 10 microM for 45Ca2+ uptake, while the EC50s for veratridine-stimulated uptake and secretion are approximately the same (75 microM). Kinetic studies show that the uptake of Ca2+ is rapid and appears to precede the secretion of catecholamines, and that the rate of uptake declines rapidly. The 50 mM-K+ show saturation kinetics with respect to external calcium concentrations at about 2 mM. On the other hand, the uptake of 45Ca2+ stimulated by nicotine does not become saturated at external calcium concentrations of 10 mM although the secretion of catecholamines reaches a maximum at external calcium concentrations of 2 mM. The data suggest that depolarizing agents such as veratridine and 50 mM-K+ stimulate 45Ca2+ entry through voltage-sensitive calcium channels, while nicotinic agonists stimulate calcium entry through the acetylcholine receptor ion channels as well as through voltage-sensitive calcium channels.
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