Robbins Jennifer R, Lee Susan Molleran, Filipovich Alexandra H, Szigligeti Peter, Neumeier Lisa, Petrovic Milan, Conforti Laura
Department of Internal Medicine, 231 Albert Sabin Way, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0585, USA.
J Physiol. 2005 Apr 1;564(Pt 1):131-43. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2004.081893. Epub 2005 Jan 27.
T lymphocytes are exposed to hypoxia during their development and when they migrate to hypoxic pathological sites. Although it has been shown that hypoxia inhibits Kv1.3 channels and proliferation in human T cells, the mechanisms by which hypoxia regulates T cell activation are not fully understood. Herein we test the hypothesis that hypoxic inhibition of Kv1.3 channels induces membrane depolarization, thus modulating the increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ that occurs during activation. Hypoxia causes membrane depolarization in human CD3+ T cells, as measured by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) with the voltage-sensitive dye DiBAC4(3). Similar depolarization is produced by the selective Kv1.3 channel blockers ShK-Dap22 and margatoxin. Furthermore, pre-exposure to such blockers prevents any further depolarization by hypoxia. Since membrane depolarization is unfavourable to the influx of Ca2+ through the CRAC channels (necessary to drive many events in T cell activation such as cytokine production and proliferation), the effect of hypoxia on T cell receptor-mediated increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ was determined using fura-2. Hypoxia depresses the increase in Ca2+ induced by anti-CD3/CD28 antibodies in approximately 50% of lymphocytes. In the remaining cells, hypoxia either did not elicit any change or produced a small increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+. Similar effects were observed in resting and pre-activated CD3+ cells and were mimicked by ShK-Dap22. These effects appear to be mediated solely by Kv1.3 channels, as we find no influence of hypoxia on IKCa1 and CRAC channels. Our findings indicate that hypoxia modulates Ca2+ homeostasis in T cells via Kv1.3 channel inhibition and membrane depolarization.
T淋巴细胞在其发育过程中以及迁移至缺氧的病理部位时会暴露于缺氧环境。尽管已有研究表明缺氧会抑制人T细胞中的Kv1.3通道和增殖,但缺氧调节T细胞活化的机制尚未完全明确。在此,我们检验了这样一个假说:缺氧对Kv1.3通道的抑制会诱导膜去极化,从而调节激活过程中发生的细胞质Ca2+增加。通过使用电压敏感染料DiBAC(4)(3)进行荧光激活细胞分选(FACS)测量发现,缺氧会导致人CD3+ T细胞膜去极化。选择性Kv1.3通道阻滞剂ShK-Dap22和玛格毒素也会产生类似的去极化。此外,预先暴露于此类阻滞剂可防止缺氧引起的进一步去极化。由于膜去极化不利于Ca2+通过CRAC通道内流(而CRAC通道内流是驱动T细胞激活中的许多事件如细胞因子产生和增殖所必需的),因此使用fura-2测定了缺氧对T细胞受体介导的细胞质Ca2+增加的影响。缺氧使约50%的淋巴细胞中抗CD3/CD28抗体诱导的Ca2+增加受到抑制。在其余细胞中,缺氧要么未引起任何变化,要么使细胞质Ca2+略有增加。在静息和预激活的CD3+细胞中也观察到了类似的效应,且ShK-Dap22可模拟这些效应。这些效应似乎仅由Kv1.3通道介导,因为我们发现缺氧对IKCa1和CRAC通道没有影响。我们的研究结果表明,缺氧通过抑制Kv1.3通道和膜去极化来调节T细胞中的Ca2+稳态。