Calcium requirements for secretion in bovine chromaffin cells
1. Measurements of membrane capacitance and intracellular Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, were used to examine the Ca2+ dependence of secretion in single adrenal chromaffin cells. 2. Intracellular dialysis of Ca2+, through a patch pipette, promoted secretion; the rate of secretion increased monotonical...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1992-05, Vol.450 (1), p.247-271 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Measurements of membrane capacitance and intracellular Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, were used to examine the Ca2+ dependence
of secretion in single adrenal chromaffin cells. 2. Intracellular dialysis of Ca2+, through a patch pipette, promoted secretion;
the rate of secretion increased monotonically as [Ca2+]i was elevated, while the total amount of secretion reached a maximum
at 1.5 microM-Ca2+ and declined at high [Ca2+]i. 3. Release of Ca2+ from internal stores, using bradykinin or ionomycin, transiently
elevated [Ca2+]i and the rate of secretion. 4. Considering responses to both Ca2+ dialysis and release from internal stores,
it appears that the rate of secretion increases over a range of [Ca2+]i levels above 0.2 microM and saturates at concentrations
greater than 10 microM, if at all. Secretion appears to have a Hill coefficient for Ca2+ of about 2. At [Ca2+]i greater than
1-2 microM, prolonged elevation of [Ca2+]i, via dialysis, produced lower rates of secretion than transient elevation of [Ca2+]i
caused by release from internal stores. This may have been caused by a depletion of readily releasable chromaffin granules
during prolonged elevation of [Ca2+]i. 5. Brief depolarizing pulses produced transient rises in both [Ca2+]i and the rate
of secretion. The ability of these pulses to evoke secretion 'washed out' during prolonged intracellular dialysis, due to
both reduced Ca2+ influx and a diminished ability of the cell to secrete in response to a given Ca2+ load. 6. The kinetics
of the secretory response depended upon the size of the depolarization-induced Ca2+ load; small rises in [Ca2+]i increased
membrane capacitance only during the depolarization, while larger rises in [Ca2+]i produced increases both during and following
the depolarization. The secretory responses that outlasted the depolarization appeared to be due to persistent elevation of
[Ca2+]i. Secretory responses were sometimes followed by a slower decline in membrane capacitance, probably due to endocytosis
of membrane. 7. Comparison of the rates of secretion measured during depolarization to those produced by Ca2+ dialysis or
release from internal stores suggests that [Ca2+]i at secretory sites can exceed 10 microM during depolarization. The spatially
averaged measurements of [Ca2+]i indicate much smaller levels of [Ca2+]i; thus, there must be pronounced spatial gradients
of [Ca2+]i during depolarization. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1992.sp019126 |