Extracellular Calcium Sensing and Extracellular Calcium Signaling
Endocrine-Hypertension Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts Brown, Edward M. and R. John MacLeod. Extracellular Calcium Sensing and Extracellular Calcium Signaling. Physiol. Rev. 81: 239-297, 2001. The cloning of a G pr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiological reviews 2001-01, Vol.81 (1), p.239-297 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Endocrine-Hypertension Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham
and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts
Brown, Edward M. and
R. John MacLeod.
Extracellular Calcium Sensing and Extracellular Calcium
Signaling. Physiol. Rev. 81: 239-297, 2001. The cloning of a G protein-coupled extracellular
Ca 2+ (Ca o 2+ )-sensing receptor (CaR) has
elucidated the molecular basis for many of the previously recognized
effects of Ca o 2+ on tissues that maintain systemic
Ca o 2+ homeostasis, especially parathyroid chief cells
and several cells in the kidney. The availability of the cloned CaR
enabled the development of DNA and antibody probes for identifying the
CaR's mRNA and protein, respectively, within these and other tissues. It also permitted the identification of human diseases resulting from
inactivating or activating mutations of the CaR gene and the subsequent
generation of mice with targeted disruption of the CaR gene. The
characteristic alterations in parathyroid and renal function in these
patients and in the mice with "knockout" of the CaR gene have
provided valuable information on the CaR's physiological roles in
these tissues participating in mineral ion homeostasis. Nevertheless,
relatively little is known about how the CaR regulates other tissues
involved in systemic Ca o 2+ homeostasis, particularly
bone and intestine. Moreover, there is evidence that additional
Ca o 2+ sensors may exist in bone cells that mediate some
or even all of the known effects of Ca o 2+ on these
cells. Even more remains to be learned about the CaR's function in the
rapidly growing list of cells that express it but are uninvolved in
systemic Ca o 2+ metabolism. Available data suggest that
the receptor serves numerous roles outside of systemic mineral ion
homeostasis, ranging from the regulation of hormonal secretion and the
activities of various ion channels to the longer term control of gene
expression, programmed cell death (apoptosis), and cellular
proliferation. In some cases, the CaR on these "nonhomeostatic"
cells responds to local changes in Ca o 2+ taking place
within compartments of the extracellular fluid (ECF) that communicate
with the outside environment (e.g., the gastrointestinal tract). In
others, localized changes in Ca o 2+ within the ECF can
originate from several mechanisms, including fluxes of calcium ions
into or out of cellular or extracellular stores or across epithelium
that absorb or secrete Ca 2+ . In any event, the CaR and |
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ISSN: | 0031-9333 1522-1210 |
DOI: | 10.1152/physrev.2001.81.1.239 |