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Regulation of P2X7-induced pore formation and cell death in pericyte-containing retinal microvessels.

Authors :
Sugiyama, Tetsuya
Kawamura, Hajime
Yamanishi, Shigeki
Kobayashi, Masato
Katsumura, Kozo
Puro, Donald G.
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology. Mar2005, Vol. 288 Issue 3, pC568-C576. 9p. 2 Diagrams, 14 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The purpose if this study was to elucidate how extracellular ATP causes cell death in the retinal microvasculature. Although ATP appears to serve as a vasoactive signal acting via P2X7 and P2Y4 purinoceptors, this nucleotide can kill microvascular cells of the retina. Because P2X7 receptor activation causes transmembrane pores to form and microvascular cells to die, we initially surmised that pore formation accounted for ATP's lethality. To test this hypothesis, we isolated pericyte-containing microvessels from rat retinas, assessed cell viability using Trypan blue dye exclusion, detected pores by determining the uptake of the fluorescent dye YO-PRO-1, measured intracellular Ca2+ with the use of fura-2, and monitored ionic currents via perforated patch pipettes. As predicted, ATP-induced cell death required P2X7 receptor activation. However, we found that pore formation was minimal because ATP's activation of P2Y4 receptors prevented P2X7 pores from forming. Rather than opening lethal pores, ATP kills via a mechanism involving voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCC). Our experiments suggest that when high concentrations of ATP caused nearly all microvascular P2X7 receptor channels to open, the resulting profound depolarization opened VDCC. Consistent with lethal Ca2+ influx via VDCC. ATP-induced cell death was markedly diminished by the VDCC blocker nifedipine or a nitric oxide (NO) donor that inhibited microvascular VDCC. We propose that purinergic vasotoxicity is normally prevented in the retina by NO-mediated inhibition of VDCC and P2Y4-mediated inhibition of P2X7 pore formation. Conversely, dysfunction of these protective mechanisms may be a previously unrecognized cause of cell death within the retinal microvasculature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03636143
Volume :
288
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16215366
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00380.2004