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A slowly inactivating calcium current works as a calcium sensor in calcitonin-secreting cells.

作者信息

Scherübl H, Schultz G, Hescheler J

机构信息

Pharmakologisches Institut der Freien Universität Berlin, FRG.

出版信息

FEBS Lett. 1990 Oct 29;273(1-2):51-4. doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(90)81048-s.

Abstract

Calcitonin (CT)-secreting cells (C-cells) are remarkably sensitive to changes in the extracellular Ca2+ concentration. In order to detect the mechanism by which C-cells monitor Ca2+, we compared a C-cell line responding to Ca2+ (rMTC cells) with another one known to have a defect in this Ca2+ signal transduction (TT cells). Rises of the Ca2+ concentration caused rMTC cells to depolarize and/or elicited spontaneous action potentials. Under voltage-clamp conditions, rMTC cells showed a slowly decaying Ca2+ inward current which was sensitive to dihydropyridines but not to Ni2+ at a low concentration. In contrast, the 'defective' TT cells neither depolarized nor fired action potentials with high Ca2+; they only exhibited an Ni2(+)-sensitive, transient Ca2+ current. The data strongly suggest that the slowly inactivating Ca2+ current is a prerequisite for Ca2(+)-sensitivity of C-cells and that fast inactivating channels are not sufficient to act as sensors of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration.

摘要

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