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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 260, Issue 30, 16286-16293, Dec, 1985
M Yarom, N Zurgil and N Zisapel
The permeability of neuronal membranes to Ca2+ is of great importance for
neurotransmitter release. The temporal characteristics of Ca2+ fluxes in
intact brain neurons have not been completely defined. In the present study
45Ca2+ was used to examine the kinetics of Ca2+ influx and efflux from
unstimulated and depolarized rat brain neurons in culture. Under
steady-state conditions three cellular exchangeable Ca2+ pools were
identified in unstimulated cells: 1) a rapidly exchanging pool (t1/2 = 7 s)
which represented about 10% of the total cellular Ca2+ and was unaffected
by the presence of Co2+, verapamil, or tetrodotoxin; 2) a slowly exchanging
pool (t1/2 = 360 s) which represented 42% of the total cellular Ca2+ and
was inhibited by Co2+, but not by verapamil or tetrodotoxin; 3) a very
slowly exchanging pool (t1/2 = 96 min) which represented 48% of the total
cell Ca2+ was observed only in the prolonged efflux experiments. The rate
of exchange of 45Ca2+ in the unstimulated cells was dependent on the
extracellular Ca2+ concentration (half-saturation at 70 microM).
Depolarization of the neurons with elevated K+ causes a rapid and sustained
45Ca2+ uptake. The cellular Ca2+ content increased from 56 nmol/mg protein
in unstimulated cells to 81 nmol/mg protein during 5 min of depolarization.
The kinetics of the net 45Ca2+ uptake by the stimulated neurons was
consistent with movement of the ion with a first order rate constant of
0.0096 s-1 (t1/2 = 72 s) into a single additional compartment. The other
cellular Ca2+ pools were apparently unaffected by stimulation. The
stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by Co2+ and by the Ca2+ channel
blocker verapamil but not by the Na+ channel blocker tetrodotoxin. Ca2+
uptake into this compartment was dependent on the extracellular Ca2+
concentration (half-saturation at 0.80 mM Ca2+). Predepolarization of the
cells with high K+ for 10-60 s prior to the addition of the radioactive
calcium did not alter the rate of 45Ca2+ incorporation into the stimulated
cells. It is concluded that the rapidly exchanging, the slowly exchanging,
and the depolarization- induced Ca2+ pools observed in intact brain neurons
are physically as well as kinetically distinct from each other. In
addition, the depolarization-induced component observed in stimulated cells
represents movement of the Ca2+ ions through a single class of voltage-
sensitive Ca2+ channels. These Ca2+ channels are inhibited by Co2+ ions and
by verapamil and are not inactivated during depolarization of the brain
neurons.
Calcium permeability changes and neurotransmitter release in cultured rat brain neurons. I. Effects of stimulation on calcium fluxes
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