Spatial profiles of store-dependent calcium release in motoneurones of the nucleus hypoglossus from newborn mouse
Hypoglossal motoneurones (HMN) are selectively damaged in both human amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and corresponding mouse models of this neurodegenerative disease, a process which has been linked to their low endogenous Ca 2+ buffering capacity and an exceptional vulnerability to Ca 2+ -media...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-03, Vol.547 (3), p.775-787 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hypoglossal motoneurones (HMN) are selectively damaged in both human amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and corresponding
mouse models of this neurodegenerative disease, a process which has been linked to their low endogenous Ca 2+ buffering capacity and an exceptional vulnerability to Ca 2+ -mediated excitotoxic events. In this report, we investigated local Ca 2+ profiles in low buffered HMNs by utilizing multiphoton microscopy, CCD imaging and patch clamp recordings in slice preparations.
Bath application of caffeine induced highly localized Ca 2+ release events, which displayed an initial peak followed by a slow âshoulderâ lasting several seconds. Peak amplitudes were
paralleled by Ca 2+ -activated, apamin-sensitive K + currents ( I KCa ), demonstrating a functional link between Ca 2+ stores and HMN excitability. The potential involvement of mitochondria was investigated by bath application of CCCP, which
collapses the electrochemical potential across the inner mitochondrial membrane. CCCP reduced peak amplitudes of caffeine
responses and consequently I KCa , indicating that functionally intact mitochondria were critical for store-dependent modulation of HMN excitability. Taken
together, our results indicate localized Ca 2+ release profiles in HMNs, where low buffering capacities enhance the role of Ca 2+ -regulating organelles as local determinants of [Ca 2+ ] i . This might expose HMN to exceptional risks during pathophysiological organelle disruptions and other ALS-related, cellular
disturbances. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.033605 |