Holevinsky K O, Jow F, Nelson D J
Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637.
J Membr Biol. 1994 May;140(1):13-30. doi: 10.1007/BF00234482.
The transition of a resting macrophage into the activated state is accompanied by changes in membrane potential, cytoplasmic pH, and intracellular calcium (Ca(i)). Activation of Cl- as well as H(+)-selective currents may give rise to stimulus-induced changes in membrane potential and counteract changes in intracellular pH (pHi) which have been observed to be closely associated with respiratory burst activation and superoxide production in macrophages. We carried out whole-cell voltage clamp experiments on human monocyte-derived macrophages (HMDMs) and characterized currents activated following an elevation in Ca(i) using isosmotic pipette and bath solutions in which Cl- was the major permeant species. Ca(i) was elevated by exposing cells to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 (1-10 microM) in the presence of extracellular Ca2+ or by internally exchanging the patch-electrode solution with ones buffered to free Ca2+ concentrations between 40 and 2,000 nM. We have identified two Ca(2+)-dependent ion conductances based on differences in their characteristic time-dependent kinetics: a rapidly activating Cl- conductance that showed variable inactivation at depolarized potentials and a H+ conductance with delayed activation kinetics. Both conductances were inhibited by the disulfonic acid stilbene DIDS (100 microM). Current activation for both Ca(2+)-dependent conductances was phosphorylation dependent, neither conductance appeared in the presence of the broad spectrum kinase inhibitor H-7 (75 microM). Inclusion of the autophosphorylated, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase in the pipette in the presence of ATP induced a rapidly activating current similar to that observed following an elevation in Ca(i). Activation of both conductances would contribute to the changes in membrane potential which accompany stimulation-induced activation of macrophages as well as counteract the decrease in pHi during sustained superoxide production.
静息巨噬细胞向激活状态的转变伴随着膜电位、细胞质pH值和细胞内钙(Ca(i))的变化。氯离子以及氢离子选择性电流的激活可能导致刺激诱导的膜电位变化,并抵消细胞内pH值(pHi)的变化,而pHi变化已被观察到与巨噬细胞的呼吸爆发激活和超氧化物产生密切相关。我们对人单核细胞衍生巨噬细胞(HMDMs)进行了全细胞电压钳实验,并使用等渗移液器和浴液(其中氯离子是主要的渗透物质)来表征Ca(i)升高后激活的电流。通过在细胞外钙离子存在的情况下将细胞暴露于钙离子载体A23187(1-10 microM),或通过用缓冲至游离钙离子浓度在40至2000 nM之间的溶液内部交换膜片钳电极溶液来升高Ca(i)。基于其特征性时间依赖性动力学的差异,我们确定了两种钙离子依赖性离子电导:一种快速激活的氯离子电导,在去极化电位下表现出可变失活;另一种氢离子电导,其激活动力学延迟。两种电导均被二磺酸芪DIDS(100 microM)抑制。两种钙离子依赖性电导的电流激活均依赖于磷酸化,在广谱激酶抑制剂H-7(75 microM)存在的情况下,两种电导均未出现。在ATP存在的情况下,将自磷酸化的、钙离子/钙调蛋白依赖性蛋白激酶包含在移液器中会诱导出一种快速激活的电流,类似于Ca(i)升高后观察到的电流。两种电导的激活都将有助于刺激诱导的巨噬细胞激活过程中伴随的膜电位变化,并抵消持续超氧化物产生过程中pHi的降低。