Calcium gradients and buffers in bovine chromaffin cells
1. Digital imaging and photometry were used in conjunction with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, Fura-2, to examine intracellular Ca2+ signals produced by depolarization of single adrenal chromaffin cells. 2. Depolarization with a patch pipette produced radial gradients of Ca2+ within the cell, with...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1992-05, Vol.450 (1), p.273-301 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Digital imaging and photometry were used in conjunction with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, Fura-2, to examine intracellular
Ca2+ signals produced by depolarization of single adrenal chromaffin cells. 2. Depolarization with a patch pipette produced
radial gradients of Ca2+ within the cell, with Ca2+ concentration highest in the vicinity of the plasma membrane. These gradients
dissipated within a few hundred milliseconds when the voltage-gated Ca2+ channels were closed. 3. Dialysis of Fura-2 into
the chromaffin cell caused concentration-dependent changes in the depolarization-induced Ca2+ signal, decreasing its magnitude
and slowing its recovery time course. These changes were used to estimate the properties of the endogenous cytoplasmic Ca2+
buffer with which Fura-2 competes for Ca2+. 4. The spatially averaged Fura-2 signal was well described by a model assuming
fast competition between Fura-2 and an endogenous buffer on a millisecond time scale. Retrieval of calcium by pumps and slow
buffers occurs on a seconds-long time scale. No temporal changes indicative of buffers with intermediate kinetics could be
detected. 5. Two independent estimates of the capacity of the fast endogenous Ca2+ buffer suggest that 98-99% of the Ca2+
entering the cell normally is taken up by this buffer. This buffer appears to be immobile, because it does not wash out of
the cell during dialysis. It has a low affinity for Ca2+ ions, because it does not saturate with 1 microM-Ca2+ inside the
cell. 6. The low capacity, affinity and mobility of the endogenous Ca2+ buffer makes it possible for relatively small amounts
of exogenous Ca2+ buffers, such as Fura-2, to exert a significant influence on the characteristics of the Ca2+ concentration
signal as measured by fluorescence ratios. On the other hand, even at moderate Fura-2 concentrations (0.4 mM) Fura-2 will
dominate over the endogenous buffers. Under these conditions radiometric Ca2+ concentration signals are largely attenuated,
but absolute fluorescence changes (at 390 nm) accurately reflect calcium fluxes. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1992.sp019127 |