Wöll E, Ritter M, Scholz W, Häussinger D, Lang F
Institute for Physiology, University of Innsbruck, Austria.
FEBS Lett. 1993 May 17;322(3):261-5. doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(93)81583-l.
In ras oncogene expressing cells, bradykinin leads to intracellular alkalinization by activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger. This effect is paralleled by oscillatory increase of intracellular calcium activity and cell shrinkage. Staurosporine (1 mumol/l) is not sufficient to prevent bradykinin induced intracellular alkalinization, thus pointing to a protein kinase C independent pathway for the activation of Na+/H+ exchange. The present study has been performed to elucidate, whether the increase of intracellular calcium contributes to cell shrinkage and activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger. To this end, the effects of the calcium ionophore ionomycin have been tested. Ionomycin leads to a dose dependent increase of intracellular calcium activity. At 100 nmol/l ionomycin intracellular calcium is increased from 114 +/- 17 nmol/l to 342 +/- 24 nmol/l (n = 9), a value within the range of intracellular calcium concentrations following application of bradykinin. The calcium increase is paralleled by a decrease of cell volume by 12 +/- 2% (n = 5) and an increase of intracellular pH from 6.78 +/- 0.02 to 6.90 +/- 0.03 (n = 11), values similar to those following application of bradykinin. The alkalinizing effect of ionomycin is completely abolished in the presence of the novel Na+/H+ exchange inhibitor HOE 694 (10 mumol/l), but is not inhibited by 1 mumol/l staurosporine. Inhibition of K+ and Cl- channels by barium (5 mmol/l) and ochratoxin-A (5 mumol/l) prevents both ionomycin induced cell shrinkage and protein kinase C independent intracellular alkalinization. It is concluded that bradykinin leads to intracellular alkalinization mainly by increasing intracellular calcium concentration. Calcium triggers calcium sensitive K+ channels, and presumably Cl- channels, the subsequent loss of cellular KCl leads to cell shrinkage which, in turn, activates Na+/H+ exchange.
在表达ras癌基因的细胞中,缓激肽通过激活Na⁺/H⁺交换体导致细胞内碱化。这种效应伴随着细胞内钙活性的振荡性增加和细胞收缩。星形孢菌素(1 μmol/L)不足以阻止缓激肽诱导的细胞内碱化,因此表明存在一条不依赖蛋白激酶C的Na⁺/H⁺交换体激活途径。本研究旨在阐明细胞内钙的增加是否导致细胞收缩和Na⁺/H⁺交换体的激活。为此,测试了钙离子载体离子霉素的作用。离子霉素导致细胞内钙活性呈剂量依赖性增加。在100 nmol/L离子霉素作用下,细胞内钙从114±17 nmol/L增加到342±24 nmol/L(n = 9),该值在应用缓激肽后细胞内钙浓度范围内。钙增加的同时细胞体积减少12±2%(n = 5),细胞内pH从6.78±0.02增加到6.90±0.03(n = 1),这些值与应用缓激肽后的相似。在新型Na⁺/H⁺交换体抑制剂HOE 694(10 μmol/L)存在时,离子霉素的碱化作用完全被消除,但不受1 μmol/L星形孢菌素抑制。钡(5 mmol/L)和赭曲霉毒素 - A(5 μmol/L)对K⁺和Cl⁻通道的抑制可防止离子霉素诱导的细胞收缩和不依赖蛋白激酶C的细胞内碱化。结论是缓激肽主要通过增加细胞内钙浓度导致细胞内碱化。钙触发钙敏感的K⁺通道,可能还有Cl⁻通道,随后细胞内KCl的丢失导致细胞收缩,进而激活Na⁺/H⁺交换。