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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 12, 7540-7546, 06, 1984
BK Chamberlain, P Volpe and S Fleischer
Isolated canine cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum exhibits Ca2+-induced Ca2+
release from both actively and passively loaded vesicles. The rate and
extent of Ca2+ release depend on the extravesicular ionized Ca2+
concentration ( [Ca2+]o) at the onset of release. Maximal release following
ATP-dependent, phosphate-facilitated Ca2+ loading (up to 360 nmol of
Ca2+/mg of protein/min at 37 degrees C) occurs at 1.5-2 microM [Ca2+]o,
with reduced release at both lower and higher Ca2+ concentrations
(half-maximal Ca2+ release at approximately 0.8 and 5.5 microM [Ca2+]o).
Only a portion of the accumulated Ca2+ is released and the release is
followed by reuptake of Ca2+. A similar Ca2+ dependence is obtained in the
absence of ATP and Pi by measuring unidirectional Ca2+ efflux from
passively loaded vesicles (maximal Ca2+ efflux at 1 microM [Ca2+]o;
half-maximal Ca2+-dependent efflux at approximately 0.15 and 13 microM
[Ca2+]o). Although the Ca2+ release rates observed in this study are
several orders of magnitude lower than the rate of Ca2+ release which
occurs in muscle cells in vivo, this Ca2+ release phenomenon may be related
to the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release which has been described for skinned
cardiac cells ( Fabiato , A. (1983) Am. J. Physiol. 245, C1-C14). Ca2+
release occurs in the presence of an ATP- regenerating system and is not
accompanied by a reduction in ATP hydrolysis. Also, since unidirectional
Ca2+ efflux (as high as 860 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein/min at 37 degrees C)
exceeds net Ca2+ release under similar conditions, Ca2+ influx proceeds
during the period of net Ca2+ release. Therefore, Ca2+ release does not
involve reversal or cessation of inward Ca2+ pumping. Other data indicate
that Ca2+ release is not mediated through the Ca2+ pump protein, but occurs
through a separate Ca2+-dependent efflux pathway, possibly a channel.
Calcium-induced calcium release from purified cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. General characteristics
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