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ABSTRACT: Myogenesis involves expression of muscle-specific transcription factors such as myogenin and MEF2 (Myocyte Enhancer Factor 2), and is essentially regulated by fluctuations of cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration. Recently we demonstrated that molecular players of Store-Operated Ca(2+) Entry (SOCE), STIM (Stromal Interacting Molecule) and Orai were fundamental in the differentiation process of post-natal human myoblasts. Besides STIM and Orai proteins, the family of TRPC (Transient Receptor Potential Canonical) channels was shown to be part of SOCE in several cellular systems. In this study, we investigated the role of TRPC channels in the human myogenesis process. We demonstrate using siRNA strategy or dominant negative TRPC overexpression, that TRPC1 and TRPC4 participate in SOCE, are necessary for MEF2 expression, and allow the fusion process to generate myotubes of normal size. Conversely, the overexpression of STIM1 with TRPC4 or TRPC1 increased SOCE, accelerated myoblast fusion, and produced hypertrophic myotubes. Interestingly, in cells depleted of TRPC1 or TRPC4, the normalization of SOCE by increasing the extracellular calcium concentration or by overexpressing STIM1 or Orai1, was not sufficient to restore normal fusion process. A normal differentiation occurred only when TRPC channel was re-expressed. These findings indicate that Ca(2+) entry mediated specifically by TRPC1 and TRPC4 allow the formation of normal-sized myotubes.
Journal of Cell Science 04/2013; · 6.11 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Although the activation of the A(1)-subtype of the adenosine receptors (A(1)AR) is arrhythmogenic in the developing heart, little is known about the underlying downstream mechanisms. The aim of this study was to determine to what extent the transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channel 3, functioning as receptor-operated channel (ROC), contributes to the A(1)AR-induced conduction disturbances. Using embryonic atrial and ventricular myocytes obtained from 4-day-old chick embryos, we found that the specific activation of A(1)AR by CCPA induced sarcolemmal Ca(2+) entry. However, A(1)AR stimulation did not induce Ca(2+) release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Specific blockade of TRPC3 activity by Pyr3, by a dominant negative of TRPC3 construct, or inhibition of phospholipase Cs and PKCs strongly inhibited the A(1)AR-enhanced Ca(2+) entry. Ca(2+) entry through TRPC3 was activated by the 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG) analog OAG via PKC-independent and -dependent mechanisms in atrial and ventricular myocytes, respectively. In parallel, inhibition of the atypical PKCζ by myristoylated PKCζ pseudosubstrate inhibitor significantly decreased the A(1)AR-enhanced Ca(2+) entry in both types of myocytes. Additionally, electrocardiography showed that inhibition of TRPC3 channel suppressed transient A(1)AR-induced conduction disturbances in the embryonic heart. Our data showing that A(1)AR activation subtly mediates a proarrhythmic Ca(2+) entry through TRPC3-encoded ROC by stimulating the phospholipase C/DAG/PKC cascade provide evidence for a novel pathway whereby Ca(2+) entry and cardiac function are altered. Thus, the A(1)AR-TRPC3 axis may represent a potential therapeutic target.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 06/2012; 287(32):26688-701. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Mitochondria are ancient endosymbiotic guests that joined the cells in the evolution of complex life. While the unique ability
of mitochondria to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and their contribution to cellular nutrition metabolism received condign
attention, our understanding of the organelle’s contribution to Ca2+ homeostasis was restricted to serve as passive Ca2+ sinks that accumulate Ca2+ along the organelle’s negative membrane potential. This paradigm has changed radically. Nowadays, mitochondria are known
to respond to environmental Ca2+ and to contribute actively to the regulation of spatial and temporal patterns of intracellular Ca2+ signaling. Accordingly, mitochondria contribute to many signal transduction pathways and are actively involved in the maintenance
of capacitative Ca2+ entry, the accomplishment of Ca2+ refilling of the endoplasmic reticulum and Ca2+-dependent protein folding. Mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis is complex and regulated by numerous, so far, genetically unidentified Ca2+ channels, pumps and exchangers that concertedly accomplish the organelle’s Ca2+ demand. Notably, mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis and functions are crucially influenced by the organelle’s structural organization and motility that, in turn,
is controlled by matrix/cytosolic Ca2+. This review intends to provide a condensed overview on the molecular mechanisms of mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis (uptake, buffering and storage, extrusion), its modulation by other ions, kinases and small molecules, and its
contribution to cellular processes as fundamental basis for the organelle’s contribution to signaling pathways. Hence, emphasis
is given to the structure-to-function and mobility-to-function relationship of the mitochondria and, thereby, bridging our
most recent knowledge on mitochondria with the best-established mitochondrial function: metabolism and ATP production.
Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology 04/2012; 455(3):375-396. · 4.46 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In endothelial cells Ca(2+) entry is an essential component of the Ca(2+) signal that takes place during processes such as cell proliferation or angiogenesis. Ca(2+) influx occurs via the store-operated Ca(2+) entry pathway, involving stromal interaction molecule-1 (STIM1) and Orai1, but also through channels gated by second messengers like the transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channels. The human umbilical vein-derived endothelial cell line EA.hy926 expressed STIM1 and Orai1 as well as several TRPC channels. By invalidating each of these molecules, we showed that TRPC3, TRPC4, and TRPC5 are essential for the formation of tubular structures observed after EA.hy926 cells were plated on Matrigel. On the contrary, the silencing of STIM1 or Orai1 did not prevent tubulogenesis. Soon after being plated on Matrigel, the cells displayed spontaneous Ca(2+) oscillations that were strongly reduced by treatment with siRNA against TRPC3, TRPC4, or TRPC5, but not siRNA against STIM1 or Orai1. Furthermore, we showed that cell proliferation was reduced upon siRNA treatment against TRPC3, TRPC5, and Orai1 channels, whereas the knockdown of STIM1 had no effect. On primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells, TRPC1, TRPC4, and STIM1 are involved in tube formation, whereas Orai1 has no effect. These data showed that TRPC channels are essential for in vitro tubulogenesis, both on endothelial cell line and on primary endothelial cells.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 12/2011; 287(8):5917-27. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The Ca(2+) depletion of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) activates the ubiquitous store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE) pathway that sustains long-term Ca(2+) signals critical for cellular functions. ER Ca(2+) depletion initiates the oligomerization of stromal interaction molecules (STIM) that control SOCE activation, but whether ER Ca(2+) refilling controls STIM de-oligomerization and SOCE termination is not known. Here, we correlate the changes in free luminal ER Ca(2+) concentrations ([Ca(2+)](ER)) and in STIM1 oligomerization, using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between CFP-STIM1 and YFP-STIM1. We observed that STIM1 de-oligomerized at much lower [Ca(2+)](ER) levels during store refilling than it oligomerized during store depletion. We then refilled ER stores without adding exogenous Ca(2+) using a membrane-permeable Ca(2+) chelator to provide a large reservoir of buffered Ca(2+). This procedure rapidly restored pre-stimulatory [Ca(2+)](ER) levels but did not trigger STIM1 de-oligomerization, the FRET signals remaining elevated as long as the external [Ca(2+)] remained low. STIM1 dissociation evoked by Ca(2+) readmission was prevented by SOC channel inhibition and was associated with cytosolic Ca(2+) elevations restricted to STIM1 puncta, indicating that Ca(2+) acts on a cytosolic target close to STIM1 clusters. These data indicate that the refilling of ER Ca(2+) stores is not sufficient to induce STIM1 de-oligomerization and that localized Ca(2+) elevations in the vicinity of assembled SOCE complexes are required for the termination of SOCE.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 08/2011; 286(42):36448-59. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: SOCE (store-operated calcium entry) is a ubiquitous cellular mechanism linking the calcium depletion of the ER (endoplasmic reticulum) to the activation of PM (plasma membrane) Ca2+-permeable channels. The activation of SOCE channels favours the entry of extracellular Ca2+ into the cytosol, thereby promoting the refilling of the depleted ER Ca2+ stores as well as the generation of long-lasting calcium signals. The molecules that govern SOCE activation comprise ER Ca2+ sensors [STIM1 (stromal interaction molecule 1) and STIM2], PM Ca2+-permeable channels {Orai and TRPC [TRP (transient receptor potential) canonical]} and regulatory Ca2+-sensitive cytosolic proteins {CRACR2 [CRAC (Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ current) regulator 2]}. Upon Ca2+ depletion of the ER, STIM molecules move towards the PM to bind and activate Orai or TRPC channels, initiating calcium entry and store refilling. This molecular rearrangement is accompanied by the formation of specialized compartments derived from the ER, the pre-cER (cortical ER) and cER. The pre-cER appears on the electron microscope as thin ER tubules enriched in STIM1 that extend along microtubules and that are devoid of contacts with the PM. The cER is located in immediate proximity to the PM and comprises thinner sections enriched in STIM1 and devoid of chaperones that might be dedicated to calcium signalling. Here, we review the molecular interactions and the morphological changes in ER structure that occur during the SOCE process.
Biology of the Cell 08/2011; 103(8):365-80. · 3.60 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: By using calcium ions as an intracellular messenger, cells walk a tight rope between life and death. Because critical cellular
functions depend on the precise delivery of Ca2+ at the right time and place, calcium ions must navigate at all times between intracellular calcium stores and target proteins
located in the cytosol, the mitochondria, or the nucleus. Due to the toxicity of high Ca2+ concentrations, even slight disruption of the elaborate calcium signaling machinery can have devastating consequences on
cell functions: too much or too little calcium at the wrong time and place might lead to rapid cell death by necrosis, or
to the induction of the cell death program of apoptosis. ER chaperones, and most notably calreticulin, play a key role in
the making and decoding of both normal and pathological calcium signals. Calreticulin is the main Ca2+-binding protein residing in the ER, and as such contributes most of the ER Ca2+ buffering capacity. Calreticulin also acts as a chaperone for several ER Ca2+ transport proteins, and thus indirectly modulates Ca2+ fluxes across the ER membrane. Accordingly, over- or underexpression of calreticulin leads to rapid and severe alterations
in ER Ca2+ homeostasis. Calreticulin expression levels are controlled by the ER Ca2+ levels, thus enabling cells to mount an appropriate response during long-term perturbations in ER Ca2+ storage. However, calreticulin levels are also increased by a variety of cellular stress conditions, and this upregulation
might contribute to the Ca2+ signaling defects leading to apoptosis. In this chapter, we will review the role of calreticulin and of other ER chaperones
in the control of Ca2+ -mediated apoptosis.
07/2011: pages 133-141;
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ABSTRACT: The ER Ca²+ sensor STIM1 and the Ca²+ channel Orai1 are key players in store-operated Ca²+ entry (SOCE). In addition, channels from the TRPC family were also shown to be engaged during SOCE, while their precise implication remains controversial. In this study, we investigated the molecular players involved in SOCE triggered by the SERCA pump inhibitor thapsigargin in an endothelial cell line, the EA.hy926. siRNA directed against STIM1 or Orai1 reduced Ca²+ entry by about 50-60%, showing that a large part of the entry is independent from these proteins. Blocking the PLC or the PKC pathway completely abolished thapsigargin-induced Ca²+ entry in cells depleted from STIM1 and/or Orai1. The phorbol ester PMA or the DAG analog OAG restored the Ca²+ entry inhibited by PLC blockers, showing an involvement of PLC/PKC pathway in SOCE. Using pharmacological inhibitors or siRNA revealed that the PKCeta is required for Ca²+ entry, and pharmacological inhibition of the tyrosine kinase Src also reduced Ca²+ entry. TRPC3 silencing diminished the entry by 45%, while the double STIM1/TRPC3 invalidation reduced Ca²+ entry by more than 85%. Hence, in EA.hy926 cells, TG-induced Ca²+ entry results from the activation of the STIM1/Orai1 machinery, and from the activation of TRPC3.
Cell calcium 12/2010; 49(2):115-27. · 4.29 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In endothelial cells, agonist-induced Ca(2+) entry takes place via the store-operated Ca(2+) entry pathway and/or via channel(s) gated by second messengers. As cell stimulation leads to both a partial Ca(2+) store depletion as well as the production of second messengers, these two pathways are problematic to distinguish. We showed that passive endoplasmic reticulum (ER) depletion by thapsigargin or cell stimulation by histamine activated a similar Ca(2+)-release-activated Ca(2+) current (CRAC)-like current when 10 mM Ba(2+)/2 mM Ca(2+) was present in the extracellular solution. Importantly, during voltage clamp recordings, histamine stimulation largely depleted the ER Ca(2+) store, explaining the activation of a CRAC-like current (due to store depletion) upon histamine in Ba(2+) medium. On the contrary, in the presence of 10 mM Ca(2+), the ER Ca(2+) content remained elevated, and histamine induced an outward rectifying current that was inhibited by Ni(2+) and KB-R7943, two blockers of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX). Both blockers also reduced histamine-induced cytosolic Ca(2+) elevation. In addition, removing extracellular Na(+) increased the current amplitude which is in line with a current supported by the NCX. These data are consistent with the involvement of the NCX working in reverse mode (Na(+) out/Ca(2+) in) during agonist-induced Ca(2+) entry in endothelial cells.
Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology 04/2010; 460(1):109-20. · 4.46 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Mitochondria play a major role in cellular calcium homeostasis. Despite decades of studies, the molecules that mediate and regulate the transport of calcium ions in and out of the mitochondrial matrix remain unknown. Here, we investigate whether SLP-2, an inner membrane mitochondrial protein of unknown function, modulates the activity of mitochondrial Ca(2+) transporters. In HeLa cells depleted of SLP-2, the amplitude and duration of mitochondrial Ca(2+) elevations evoked by agonists were decreased compared to control cells. SLP-2 depletion increased the rates of calcium extrusion from mitochondria. This effect disappeared upon Na(+) removal or addition of CGP-37157, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, and persisted in permeabilized cells exposed to a fixed cytosolic Na(+) and Ca(2+) concentration. The rates of mitochondrial Ca(2+) extrusion were prolonged in SLP-2 over-expressing cells, independently of the amplitude of mitochondrial Ca(2+) elevations. The amplitude of cytosolic Ca(2+) elevations was increased by SLP-2 depletion and decreased by SLP-2 over-expression. These data show that SLP-2 modulates mitochondrial calcium extrusion, thereby altering the ability of mitochondria to buffer Ca(2+) and to shape cytosolic Ca(2+) signals.
Cell calcium 11/2009; 47(1):11-8. · 4.29 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In the genetic disease cystic fibrosis (CF), the most common mutation F508del promotes the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention of misfolded CF proteins. Furthermore, in homozygous F508del-CFTR airway epithelial cells, the histamine Ca(2+) mobilization is abnormally increased. Because the uptake of Ca(2+) by mitochondria during Ca(2+) influx or Ca(2+) release from ER stores may be crucial for maintaining a normal Ca(2+) homeostasis, we compared the mitochondria morphology and distribution by transmission electron microscopy technique and the mitochondria membrane potential variation (DeltaPsi(mit)) using a fluorescent probe (TMRE) on human CF (CF-KM4) and non-CF (MM39) tracheal serous gland cell lines. Confocal imaging of Rhod-2-AM-loaded or of the mitochondrial targeted cameleon 4mtD3cpv-transfected human CF and non-CF cells, were used to examine the ability of mitochondria to sequester intracellular Ca(2+). The present study reveals that (i) the mitochondria network is fragmented in F508del-CFTR cells, (ii) the DeltaPsi(mit) of CF mitochondria is depolarized compared non-CF mitochondria, and (iii) the CF mitochondria Ca(2+) uptake is reduced compared non-CF cells. We propose that these defects in airway epithelial F508del-CFTR cells are the consequence of mitochondrial membrane depolarization leading to a deficient mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake.
Mitochondrion 03/2009; 9(4):232-41. · 3.62 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The role of mitochondria in cell signaling is becoming increasingly apparent, to an extent that the signaling role of mitochondria appears to have stolen the spotlight from their primary function as energy producers. In this chapter, we will review the ionic basis of calcium handling by mitochondria and discuss the mechanisms that these organelles use to regulate the activity of plasma membrane calcium channels and transporters.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 02/2009; 1787(11):1383-94. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Mitochondria are ancient endosymbiotic guests that joined the cells in the evolution of complex life. While the unique ability of mitochondria to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and their contribution to cellular nutrition metabolism received condign attention, our understanding of the organelle's contribution to Ca(2+) homeostasis was restricted to serve as passive Ca(2+) sinks that accumulate Ca(2+) along the organelle's negative membrane potential. This paradigm has changed radically. Nowadays, mitochondria are known to respond to environmental Ca(2+) and to contribute actively to the regulation of spatial and temporal patterns of intracellular Ca(2+) signaling. Accordingly, mitochondria contribute to many signal transduction pathways and are actively involved in the maintenance of capacitative Ca(2+) entry, the accomplishment of Ca(2+) refilling of the endoplasmic reticulum and Ca(2+)-dependent protein folding. Mitochondrial Ca(2+) homeostasis is complex and regulated by numerous, so far, genetically unidentified Ca(2+) channels, pumps and exchangers that concertedly accomplish the organelle's Ca(2+) demand. Notably, mitochondrial Ca(2+) homeostasis and functions are crucially influenced by the organelle's structural organization and motility that, in turn, is controlled by matrix/cytosolic Ca(2+). This review intends to provide a condensed overview on the molecular mechanisms of mitochondrial Ca(2+) homeostasis (uptake, buffering and storage, extrusion), its modulation by other ions, kinases and small molecules, and its contribution to cellular processes as fundamental basis for the organelle's contribution to signaling pathways. Hence, emphasis is given to the structure-to-function and mobility-to-function relationship of the mitochondria and, thereby, bridging our most recent knowledge on mitochondria with the best-established mitochondrial function: metabolism and ATP production.
Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology 01/2008; 455(3):375-96. · 4.46 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Stromal interaction molecule (STIM) proteins are putative ER Ca2+ sensors that recruit and activate store-operated Ca2+ (SOC) channels at the plasma membrane, a process triggered by the Ca2+ depletion of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To test whether STIM1 is required for ER refilling, we used RNA interference and measured Ca2+ signals in the cytosol, the ER, and the mitochondria of HeLa cells. Knockdown of STIM1 (mRNA levels, 73%) reduced SOC entry by 73% when sarco/endoplasmic Ca2+ ATPases (SERCA) were inhibited by thapsigargin but did not prevent Ca2+ stores refilling when cells were stimulated by physiological agonists. Stores could be fully refilled by increasing the external Ca2+ concentration above physiological values, but no cytosolic Ca2+ signals were detected during store refilling even at very high Ca2+ concentrations. [Ca2+](ER) measurements revealed that the basal activity of SERCA was not affected in STIM1 knockdown cells and that [Ca2+](ER) levels were restored within 2 min in physiological saline following store depletion. Mitochondrial inhibitors reduced ER refilling in wild-type but not in STIM1 knockdown cells, indicating that ER refilling does not require functional mitochondria at low STIM1 levels. Our data show that ER refilling is largely preserved at reduced STIM1 levels, despite a drastic reduction of store-operated Ca2+ entry, because Ca2+ ions are directly transferred from SOC channels to SERCA. These findings are consistent with the formation of microdomains containing not only SOC channels on the plasma membrane and STIM proteins on the ER but also SERCA pumps and mitochondria to refill the ER without perturbing the cytosol.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 05/2007; 282(15):11456-64. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Mitochondria are dynamic organelles that modulate cellular Ca2+ signals by interacting with Ca2+ transporters on the plasma membrane or the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To study how mitochondria dynamics affects cell Ca2+ homeostasis, we overexpressed two mitochondrial fission proteins, hFis1 and Drp1, and measured Ca2+ changes within the cytosol and the ER in HeLa cells. Both proteins fragmented mitochondria, decreased their total volume by 25-40%, and reduced the fraction of subplasmalemmal mitochondria by 4-fold. The cytosolic Ca2+ signals elicited by histamine were unaltered in cells lacking subplasmalemmal mitochondria as long as Ca2+ was present in the medium, but the signals were significantly blunted when Ca2+ was removed. Upon Ca2+ withdrawal, the free ER Ca2+ concentration decreased rapidly, and hFis1 cells were unable to respond to repetitive histamine stimulations. The loss of stored Ca2+ was due to an increased activity of plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) pumps and was associated with an increased influx of Ca2+ and Mn2+ across store-operated Ca2+ channels. The increased Ca2+ influx compensated for the loss of stored Ca2+, and brief Ca2+ additions between successive agonist stimulations fully corrected subsequent histamine responses. We propose that the lack of subplasmalemmal mitochondria disrupts the transfer of Ca2+ from plasma membrane channels to the ER and that the resulting increase in subplasmalemmal [Ca2+] up-regulates the activity of PMCA. The increased Ca2+ extrusion promotes ER depletion and the subsequent activation of store-operated Ca2+ channels. Cells thus adapt to the lack of subplasmalemmal mitochondria by relying on external rather than on internal Ca2+ for signaling.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 01/2006; 280(52):43198-208. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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Harm J Knot,
Ismail Laher,
Eric A Sobie,
Silvia Guatimosim,
Leticia Gomez-Viquez,
Hali Hartmann,
Long-Sheng Song,
W J Lederer,
Wolfgang F Graier,
Roland Malli, Maud Frieden,
Ole H Petersen
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ABSTRACT: The use of fluorescent dyes over the past two decades has led to a revolution in our understanding of calcium signaling. Given the ubiquitous role of Ca(2+) in signal transduction at the most fundamental levels of molecular, cellular, and organismal biology, it has been challenging to understand how the specificity and versatility of Ca(2+) signaling is accomplished. In excitable cells, the coordination of changing Ca(2+) concentrations at global (cellular) and well-defined subcellular spaces through the course of membrane depolarization can now be conceptualized in the context of disease processes such as cardiac arrhythmogenesis. The spatial and temporal dimensions of Ca(2+) signaling are similarly important in non-excitable cells, such as endothelial and epithelial cells, to regulate multiple signaling pathways that participate in organ homeostasis as well as cellular organization and essential secretory processes.
Molecular Interventions 05/2005; 5(2):112-27. · 4.59 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ refilling is an active process to ensure an appropriate ER Ca2+ content under basal conditions and to maintain or restore ER Ca2+ concentration during/after cell stimulation. The mechanisms to achieve successful ER Ca2+ refilling are multiple and built on a concerted action of processes that provide a suitable reservoir for Ca2+ sequestration into the ER. Despite mitochondria having been found to play an essential role in the maintenance of capacitative Ca2+ entry by buffering subplasmalemmal Ca2+, their contribution to ER Ca2+ refilling was not subjected to detailed analysis so far. Thus, this study was designed to elucidate the involvement of mitochondria in Ca2+ store refilling during and after cell stimulation. ER Ca2+ refilling was found to be accomplished even during continuous inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-triggered ER Ca2+ release by an agonist. Basically, ER Ca2+ refilling depended on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ as the source and sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) activity. Interestingly, in the presence of an IP3-generating agonist, ER Ca2+ refilling was prevented by the inhibition of trans-mitochondrial Ca2+ flux by CGP 37157 (7-chloro-5-(2-chlorophenyl)-1,5-dihydro-4,1-benzothiazepin-2(3H)-one) that precludes the mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger as well as by mitochondrial depolarization using a mixture of oligomycin and antimycin A. In contrast, after the removal of the agonist, ER refilling was found to be largely independent of trans-mitochondrial Ca2+ flux. Under these conditions, ER Ca2+ refilling took place even without an associated Ca2+ elevation in the deeper cytosol, thus, indicating that superficial ER domains mimic mitochondrial Ca2+ buffering and efficiently sequester subplasmalemmal Ca2+ and consequently facilitate capacitative Ca2+ entry. Hence, these data point to different contribution of mitochondria in the process of ER Ca2+ refilling based on the presence or absence of IP3, which represents the turning point for the dependence or autonomy of ER Ca2+ refilling from trans-mitochondrial Ca2+ flux.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 05/2005; 280(13):12114-22. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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The Journal of Physiology 08/2004; 524(3):701 - 713. · 4.72 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Mitochondria modulate Ca(2+) signals by taking up, buffering, and releasing Ca(2+) at key locations near Ca(2+) release or influx channels. The role of such local interactions between channels and organelles is difficult to establish in living cells because mitochondria form an interconnected network constantly remodeled by coordinated fusion and fission reactions. To study the effect of a controlled disruption of the mitochondrial network on Ca(2+) homeostasis, we took advantage of hFis1, a protein that promotes mitochondrial fission by recruiting the dynamin-related protein, Drp1. hFis1 expression in HeLa cells induced a rapid and complete fragmentation of mitochondria, which redistributed away from the plasma membrane and clustered around the nucleus. Despite the dramatic morphological alteration, hFis1-fragmented mitochondria maintained a normal transmembrane potential and pH and took up normally the Ca(2+) released from intracellular stores upon agonist stimulation, as measured with a targeted ratiometric pericam probe. In contrast, hFis1-fragmented mitochondria took up more slowly the Ca(2+) entering across plasma membrane channels, because the Ca(2+) ions reaching mitochondria propagated faster and in a more coordinated manner in interconnected than in fragmented mitochondria. In parallel cytosolic fura-2 measurements, the capacitative Ca(2+) entry (CCE) elicited by store depletion was only marginally reduced by hFis1 expression. Regardless of mitochondria shape and location, disruption of mitochondrial potential with uncouplers or oligomycin/rotenone reduced CCE by approximately 35%. These observations indicate that close contact to Ca(2+) influx channels is not required for CCE modulation and that the formation of a mitochondrial network facilitates Ca(2+) propagation within interconnected mitochondria.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 06/2004; 279(21):22704-14. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Mitochondria modulate Ca2+ signals by taking up, buffering, and releasing Ca2+ at key locations near Ca2+ release or influx channels. The role of such local interactions between channels and organelles is difficult to establish
in living cells because mitochondria form an interconnected network constantly remodeled by coordinated fusion and fission
reactions. To study the effect of a controlled disruption of the mitochondrial network on Ca2+ homeostasis, we took advantage of hFis1, a protein that promotes mitochondrial fission by recruiting the dynamin-related
protein, Drp1. hFis1 expression in HeLa cells induced a rapid and complete fragmentation of mitochondria, which redistributed
away from the plasma membrane and clustered around the nucleus. Despite the dramatic morphological alteration, hFis1-fragmented
mitochondria maintained a normal transmembrane potential and pH and took up normally the Ca2+ released from intracellular stores upon agonist stimulation, as measured with a targeted ratiometric pericam probe. In contrast,
hFis1-fragmented mitochondria took up more slowly the Ca2+ entering across plasma membrane channels, because the Ca2+ ions reaching mitochondria propagated faster and in a more coordinated manner in interconnected than in fragmented mitochondria.
In parallel cytosolic fura-2 measurements, the capacitative Ca2+ entry (CCE) elicited by store depletion was only marginally reduced by hFis1 expression. Regardless of mitochondria shape
and location, disruption of mitochondrial potential with uncouplers or oligomycin/rotenone reduced CCE by ∼35%. These observations
indicate that close contact to Ca2+ influx channels is not required for CCE modulation and that the formation of a mitochondrial network facilitates Ca2+ propagation within interconnected mitochondria.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 05/2004; 279(21):22704-22714. · 4.77 Impact Factor