Dihydropyridine receptors as voltage sensors for a depolarization-evoked, IP3R-mediated, slow calcium signal in skeletal muscle cells
Author
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Araya, Roberto
Author
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Liberona Leppe, José
Author
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Cárdenas Matus, Julio
Author
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Riveros Keller, Nora
Author
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Estrada Hormazábal, Manuel
Author
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Powell, Jeanne A.
Author
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Carrasco, María Angélica
Author
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Jaimovich Pérez, Enrique
Admission date
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2018-08-28T14:10:06Z
Available date
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2018-08-28T14:10:06Z
Publication date
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2003
Cita de ítem
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J. Gen. Physiol. Volume 121 January 2003 pp. 3–16
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1085/jgp.20028671
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/151318
Abstract
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The dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), normally a voltage-dependent calcium channel, functions in skeletal muscle essentially as a voltage sensor, triggering intracellular calcium release for excitation-contraction coupling. In addition to this fast calcium release, via ryanodine receptor (RYR) channels, depolarization of skeletal myotubes evokes slow calcium waves, unrelated to contraction, that involve the cell nucleus (Jaimovich, E., R. Reyes, J.L. Liberona, and J.A. Powell. 2000. Am. J Physiol. Cell Physiol. 278:C998-C1010). We tested the hypothesis that DHPR may also be the voltage sensor for these slow calcium signals. In cultures of primary rat myotubes, 10 V,M nifedipine (a DHPR inhibitor) completely blocked the slow calcium (fluo-3-fluorescence) transient after 47 mM K+ depolarization and only partially reduced the fast Ca2+ signal. Dysgenic myotubes from the GLT cell line, which do not express the alpha(1) subunit of the DHPR, did not show either type of calcium transient following depolarization. After transfection of the alpha(1) DNA into the GLT cells, K+ depolarization induced slow calcium transients that were similar to those present in normal C2C12 and normal NLT cell lines. Slow calcium transients in transfected cells were blocked by nifedipine as well as by the G protein inhibitor, pertussis toxin, but not by ryanodine, the RYR inhibitor. Since slow Ca2+ transients appear to be mediated by IP3, we measured the increase of IP3 mass after K+ depolarization. The IP3 transient seen in control cells was inhibited by nifedipine and was absent in nontransfected dysgenic cells, but alpha(1)-transfected cells recovered the depolarization-induced IP3 transient. In normal myotubes, 10 muM nifedipine, but not ryanodine, inhibited c-jun and c-fos mRNA increase after K+ depolarization. These results suggest a role for DHPR-mediated calcium signals in regulation of early gene expression. A model of excitation-transcription coupling is presented in which both G proteins and IP3 appear as important downstream mediators after sensing of depolarization by DHPR.