Pandol S J, Schoeffield-Payne M S
Department of Medicine, Veterans Administration, San Diego, California.
J Biol Chem. 1990 Aug 5;265(22):12846-53.
The present studies were performed to determine the role of cyclic GMP in regulating agonist mediated calcium entry in the pancreatic acinar cell. In guinea pig-dispersed pancreatic acini the findings demonstrated that carbachol stimulated a transient 20-40-fold rise in cellular cyclic GMP followed by a sustained 3-4-fold rise in cellular cyclic GMP. The guanylate cyclase inhibitor, 6-anilino-5,8-quinolinedione (LY83583), caused a dose-dependent inhibition of carbachol-stimulated increases in cellular cyclic GMP both during the initial transient large increase in cyclic GMP and the sustained increase in cyclic GMP. LY83583 also inhibited cellular Ca2+ influx during carbachol stimulation and reloading of the agonist-sensitive pool of Ca2+ at the termination of carbachol stimulation with atropine. The effect of the inhibition on reloading of the agonist-sensitive pool was secondary to its effects on the plasma membrane C2+ entry. The addition of dibutyryl cyclic GMP to LY83583-treated acini restored Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane. Nitroprusside increased both cellular cyclic GMP and the rate of Ca2+ influx. During periods when plasma membrane Ca2+ entry was activated, cellular cyclic GMP levels were increased. These results suggest that agonist-induced increases in cellular cyclic GMP are necessary and sufficient to mediate the effects of the agonist on the plasma membrane Ca2+ entry mechanism.