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Hypoxia-elicited catecholamine release is controlled by L-type as well as N/PQ types of calcium channels in rat embryo chromaffin cells

Authors :
Antonio M. G. de Diego
Juan-Fernando Padín
José-Carlos Fernández-Morales
Stefan Vestring
Juan-Alberto Arranz-Tagarro
Antonio G. García
Source :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology. 307(5)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

At early life, the adrenal chromaffin cells respond with a catecholamine surge under hypoxic conditions. This response depends on Ca2+ entry through voltage-activated calcium channels (VACCs). We have investigated here three unresolved questions that concern this response in rat embryo chromaffin cells (ECCs): 1) the relative contribution of L (α1D, Cav1.3), N (α1B, Cav2.2), and PQ (α1A, Cav2.1) to the whole cell Ca2+ current ( ICa); 2) the relative contribution of L and N/PQ channels to the cytosolic Ca2+ elevations triggered by hypoxia (Δ[Ca2+]c); and 3) the role of L and non-L high-VACCs in the regulation of the catecholamine surge occurring during prolonged (1 min) hypoxia exposure of ECCs. Nimodipine halved peak ICa and blocked 60% the total Ca2+ entry during a 50-ms depolarizing pulse to 0 mV (QCa). Combined ω-agatoxin IVA plus ω-conotoxin GVIA (Aga/GVIA) blocked 30% of both ICa peak and QCa. This relative proportion of L- and non-L VACCs was corroborated by Western blot that indicated 55, 23, and 25% relative expression of L, N, and PQ VACCs. Exposure of ECCs to hypoxia elicited a mild but sustained Δ[Ca2+]c; the area of Δ[Ca2+]c was blocked 50% by nifedipine and 10% by Aga/GVIA. Exposure of ECCs to 1-min hypoxia elicited an initial transient burst of amperometric secretory spikes followed by scattered spikes along the time of cell exposure to hypoxia. This bulk response was blocked 85% by nimodipine and 35% by Aga/GVIA. Histograms on secretory spike frequency vs. time indicated a faster initial inactivation when Ca2+ entry took place through N/PQ channels; more sustained secretion but at a lower rate was associated to Ca2+ entry through L channels. The results suggest that the HIS response may initially be controlled by L and P/Q channels, but later on, N/PQ channels inactivate and the delayed HIS response is maintained at lower rate by slow-inactivating L channels.

Details

ISSN :
15221563
Volume :
307
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....24d5691c522b487a0e78be049ed5075b