Eshete F, Fields R D
National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4480, USA.
J Neurosci. 2001 Sep 1;21(17):6694-705. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.21-17-06694.2001.
Autonomous activation of calcium-calmodulin kinase (CaMKII) has been proposed as a molecular mechanism for decoding Ca(2+) spike frequencies resulting from action potential firing, but this has not been investigated in intact neurons. This was studied in mouse DRG neurons in culture using confocal measurements of Ca(2+) and biochemical measurements of CaMKII autophosphorylation and autonomous activity. Using electrical stimulation at different frequencies, we find that CaMKII autonomous activity reached near maximal levels after approximately 45 impulses, regardless of firing frequency (1-10 Hz), and autonomous activity declined with prolonged stimulation. Frequency-dependent activation of CaMKII was limited to spike frequencies in the range of 0.1-1 Hz, despite marked increases in Ca(2+) at higher frequencies (1-30 Hz). The high levels of autonomous activity measured before stimulation and the relatively long duration of Ca(2+) spikes induced by action potentials ( approximately 300 msec) are consistent with the lower frequency range of action potential decoding by CaMKII. The high autonomous activity under basal conditions was associated with extracellular [Ca(2+)], independently from changes in Ca(2+), and unrelated to synaptic or spontaneous impulse activity. CaMKII autonomous activity in response to brief bursts of action potentials correlated better with the frequency of Ca(2+) transients than with the concentration of Ca(2+). In conclusion, CaMKII may decode frequency-modulated responses between 0.1 and 1 Hz in these neurons, but other mechanisms may be required to decode higher frequencies. Alternatively, CaMKII may mediate high-frequency responses in subcellular microdomains in which the enzyme is maintained at a low level of autonomous activity or the Ca(2+) transients have faster kinetics.
钙调蛋白激酶(CaMKII)的自主激活被认为是解码动作电位发放所产生的Ca(2+)尖峰频率的一种分子机制,但尚未在完整神经元中进行研究。本研究使用共聚焦测量[Ca(2+)]i以及CaMKII自身磷酸化和自主活性的生化测量方法,对培养的小鼠背根神经节(DRG)神经元进行了研究。通过不同频率的电刺激,我们发现无论发放频率(1 - 10 Hz)如何,CaMKII自主活性在大约45次冲动后达到接近最大水平,并且自主活性随长时间刺激而下降。尽管在较高频率(1 - 30 Hz)时[Ca(2+)]i显著增加,但CaMKII的频率依赖性激活仅限于0.1 - 1 Hz范围内的尖峰频率。刺激前测量到的高水平自主活性以及动作电位诱导的Ca(2+)尖峰相对较长的持续时间(约300毫秒)与CaMKII对动作电位解码的较低频率范围一致。基础条件下的高自主活性与细胞外[Ca(2+)]相关,独立于[Ca(2+)]i的变化,且与突触或自发冲动活动无关。CaMKII对短暂动作电位爆发的自主活性与Ca(2+)瞬变频率的相关性比对[Ca(2+)]i浓度的相关性更好。总之,CaMKII可能解码这些神经元中0.1至1 Hz之间的频率调制反应,但可能需要其他机制来解码更高频率。或者,CaMKII可能在亚细胞微区中介导高频反应,在这些微区中该酶保持在低水平的自主活性或Ca(2+)瞬变具有更快的动力学。