Baron A, Loirand G, Pacaud P, Mironneau C, Mironneau J
Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire et Pharmacologie Moléculaire, Université de Bordeaux II, France.
Circ Res. 1993 Jun;72(6):1317-25. doi: 10.1161/01.res.72.6.1317.
Thrombin induces a number of physiological responses in several types of cells. To determine the action of thrombin in the vein, the electrophysiological and mechanical effects of thrombin were studied in rat portal vein smooth muscle cells. Ca2+ channel currents were recorded using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Thrombin had both inhibitory and stimulatory effects on the Ca2+ channel current. The inhibitory effect was reversed on washout of thrombin, whereas the stimulatory effect was maintained after thrombin was removed. Thrombin (1 unit/ml) produced a reversible decrease of 27.3 +/- 3.3% (n = 12) in the current amplitude and a sustained increase of 71.2 +/- 12.9% (n = 20). The thrombin-induced inhibition of Ca2+ channel current was blocked by the thrombin inhibitor hirudin and by the protease inhibitor leupeptin. The stimulatory effect of thrombin was inhibited by hirudin, by intracellular application of guanosine 5'-O-(beta-thio)diphosphate, and by antiphophatidylinositide antibodies but not by pertussis toxin. The thrombin-induced enhancement of the Ca2+ channel current amplitude was not observed when the current was previously stimulated by phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate. This suggests that the inhibitory effect of thrombin was related to its proteolytic activity and that the stimulatory effect involved activation of a pertussis toxin-insensitive GTP-binding protein, phosphatidylinositide hydrolysis, and protein kinase C activation. Both thrombin effects occurred in the same concentration range (0.001-10 units/ml). The thrombin-induced contraction of portal vein strips was completely inhibited by isradipine, and thrombin did not produce an increase in cytosolic [Ca2+], measured by indo-1 fluorescence in cells clamped at -50 mV, sufficient to activate Ca(2+)-dependent chloride current.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
凝血酶可在多种类型细胞中引发一系列生理反应。为确定凝血酶在静脉中的作用,研究了凝血酶对大鼠门静脉平滑肌细胞的电生理和机械效应。采用全细胞膜片钳技术记录Ca2+通道电流。凝血酶对Ca2+通道电流既有抑制作用又有刺激作用。凝血酶洗脱后抑制作用逆转,而去除凝血酶后刺激作用仍持续存在。凝血酶(1单位/毫升)使电流幅度可逆性降低27.3±3.3%(n = 12),并使电流持续增加71.2±12.9%(n = 20)。凝血酶诱导的Ca2+通道电流抑制作用被凝血酶抑制剂水蛭素和蛋白酶抑制剂亮抑酶肽阻断。水蛭素、细胞内应用鸟苷5'-O-(β-硫代)二磷酸以及抗磷脂酰肌醇抗体均可抑制凝血酶的刺激作用,但百日咳毒素无此作用。当电流先前由佛波酯12,13-二丁酸刺激时,未观察到凝血酶诱导的Ca2+通道电流幅度增强。这表明凝血酶的抑制作用与其蛋白水解活性有关,而刺激作用涉及激活对百日咳毒素不敏感的GTP结合蛋白、磷脂酰肌醇水解和蛋白激酶C激活。两种凝血酶效应均在相同浓度范围(0.001 - 10单位/毫升)内出现。硝苯地平可完全抑制凝血酶诱导的门静脉条收缩,且在钳制于 - 50 mV的细胞中,通过indo - 1荧光测量,凝血酶未使胞质[Ca2+]增加到足以激活Ca(2+)依赖性氯电流的程度。(摘要截选至250词)