Centre for Vision and Vascular Sciences, Queen's University of Belfast, Institute of Clinical Sciences, Grosvenor Road, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast BT12 6BA, UK.
Exp Physiol. 2010 Nov;95(11):1049-60. doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.2010.052456. Epub 2010 Aug 9.
Ever since it was shown that maintenance of muscle contraction required the presence of extracellular Ca(2+), evidence has accumulated that Ca(2+) plays a crucial role in excitation-contraction coupling. This culminated in the use of the photoprotein aequorin to demonstrate that Ca(2+) increased after depolarization but before contraction in barnacle muscle. Green fluorescent protein was extracted from the same jellyfish as aequorin, so this work also has important historical links to the use of fluorescent proteins as markers in living cells. The subsequent development of cell-permeant Ca(2+) indicators resulted in a dramatic increase in related research, revealing Ca(2+) to be a ubiquitous cell signal. High-speed, confocal Ca(2+) imaging has now revealed subcellular detail not previously apparent, with the identification of Ca(2+) sparks. These act as building blocks for larger transients during excitation-contraction coupling in cardiac muscle, but their function in smooth muscle appears more diverse, with evidence suggesting both 'excitatory' and 'inhibitory' roles. Sparks can activate Ca(2+)-sensitive Cl() and K(+) currents, which exert positive and negative feedback, respectively, on global Ca(2+) signalling, through changes in membrane potential and activation of voltage-operated Ca(2+) channels. Calcium imaging has also demonstrated that agonists that appear to evoke relatively tonic increases in average Ca(2+) at the whole tissue level often stimulate much higher frequency phasic Ca(2+) oscillations at the cellular level. These findings may require re-evaluation of some of our models of Ca(2+) signalling to account for newly revealed cellular and subcellular detail. Future research in the field is likely to make increasing use of genetically coded Ca(2+) indicators expressed in an organelle- or tissue-specific manner.
自从证明肌肉收缩的维持需要细胞外 Ca(2+)的存在以来,越来越多的证据表明 Ca(2+)在兴奋-收缩耦联中起着至关重要的作用。这最终导致使用发光蛋白水母素来证明在藤壶肌肉去极化后但在收缩前 [Ca(2+)]i 增加。绿色荧光蛋白是从与水母素相同的水母中提取的,因此这项工作也与荧光蛋白作为活细胞标记物的使用有重要的历史联系。随后,细胞通透性 Ca(2+)指示剂的开发导致相关研究的急剧增加,揭示 Ca(2+)是一种普遍存在的细胞信号。高速共焦 Ca(2+)成像现在已经揭示了以前不明显的亚细胞细节,包括 Ca(2+)火花的鉴定。这些在心脏肌肉的兴奋-收缩耦联期间作为更大瞬变的构建块,但其在平滑肌中的功能似乎更加多样化,有证据表明具有“兴奋”和“抑制”作用。火花可以激活 Ca(2+)敏感的 Cl()和 K(+)电流,它们分别通过膜电位的变化和电压操作的 Ca(2+)通道的激活,对全局 Ca(2+)信号产生正反馈和负反馈。钙成像还表明,在整个组织水平上似乎引起相对持续增加的激动剂平均 [Ca(2+)]i 通常在细胞水平上刺激更高频率的相性 Ca(2+)振荡。这些发现可能需要重新评估我们的一些 Ca(2+)信号模型,以解释新揭示的细胞和亚细胞细节。该领域的未来研究可能会越来越多地使用以细胞器或组织特异性方式表达的遗传编码 Ca(2+)指示剂。