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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 266, Issue 30, 20062-20069, Oct, 1991
T Kawanishi, AL Nieminen, B Herman and JJ Lemasters
The model of "chemical hypoxia" with KCN plus iodoacetic acid mimics the
ATP depletion and reductive stress of hypoxia. Here, we examined the
effects of chemical hypoxia on cytosolic free Na+ and Ca2+ in single
cultured rat hepatocytes by multiparameter digitized video microscopy and
ratio imaging of sodium-binding furan indicator (SBFI) and Fura-2.
Intracellular Na+ increased from about 10 mM to more than 100 mM after 20
min of chemical hypoxia, whereas cytosolic free Ca2+ remained virtually
unchanged. In normoxic hepatocytes, phenylephrine (50 microM) and
Arg-vasopressin (20-40 nM) induced Ca2+ oscillations in 70 and 40% of
cells, respectively. These Ca2+ oscillations were suppressed after one
spike following the onset of chemical hypoxia. Phenylephrine and
vasopressin also increased inositol phosphate formation by 22 and 147%,
respectively. This effect was suppressed by KCN plus iodoacetate.
Intracellular acidosis is characteristic of chemical hypoxia. Intracellular
acidosis induced by 40 mM Na-acetate suppressed Ca2+ oscillations but did
not inhibit hormone-induced inositol phosphate formation. Cytosolic
alkalinization also suppressed Ca2+ oscillations. However, prevention of
intracellular acidosis with monensin (10 microM) did not prevent
suppression of Ca2+ oscillations during chemical hypoxia. Mitochondrial
depolarization with uncoupler did not change free Ca2+ levels during
chemical hypoxia, indicating that mitochondria do not regulate free Ca2+
during chemical hypoxia. From these results, we conclude: 1) chemical
hypoxia does not block Na+ influx across the plasma membrane; 2) Chemical
hypoxia inhibits hormone- stimulated Ca2+ flux pathways across cellular
membranes by two different mechanisms: (a) by ATP depletion, which disrupts
hormone-myo- inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate coupling, and (b) by intracellular
acidosis, which inhibits myo-inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate-stimulated Ca2+
release from intracellular stores; 3) during ATP depletion by chemical
hypoxia, mitochondria do not take up Ca2+ to maintain cytosolic free Ca2+
at low concentrations.
Suppression of Ca2+ oscillations in cultured rat hepatocytes by chemical hypoxia
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7090.
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