Enhancement of Ca Influx and Ciliary Beating by Membrane Hyperpolarization due to ATP-Sensitive K Channel Opening in Mouse Airway Epithelial Cells
نویسندگان
چکیده
Among the several types of cells composing the airway epithelium, the ciliary cells are responsible for one of the most important defense mechanisms of the airway epithelium: the transport of inhaled particles back up into the throat by coordinated ciliary movement. Changes in the cytoplasmic Ca concentration ([Ca]i) are the main driving force controlling the ciliary activity. In mouse ciliary cells, membrane hyperpolarization from 220 to 260 mV under whole-cell voltage-clamp induced a slow but significant [Ca]i rise in a reversible manner. This rise was completely inhibited by the removal of Ca from the extracellular solution. Application of diazoxide, an ATP-dependent K channel opener, dose-dependently induced a membrane hyperpolarization (EC50 5 2.3 mM), which was prevented by the addition of 5 mM glibenclamide. An inwardly rectifying current was elicited by the application of 10 mM diazoxide and suppressed by subsequent addition of 5 mM glibenclamide. Moreover, the application of 10 mM diazoxide induced a significant [Ca]i rise and facilitated ciliary movement. Multi-cell reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction analyses and immunocytochemical staining suggested that the subunit combination of Kir6.2/SUR2B and possibly also Kir6.1/ SUR2B is expressed in ciliary cells. The confocal Ca imaging analyses suggested that the [Ca]i rise induced by diazoxide occurred preferentially in the apical submembrane region. In conclusion, the application of a KATP channel opener to airway ciliary cells induces membrane hyperpolarization and thereby induces a [Ca]i rise via the facilitation of Ca 21 influx through the non–voltage-dependent Ca permeable channels. Therefore, a KATP opener may be beneficial in facilitating ciliary movement.
منابع مشابه
Enhancement of Ca(2+) influx and ciliary beating by membrane hyperpolarization due to ATP-sensitive K(+) channel opening in mouse airway epithelial cells.
Among the several types of cells composing the airway epithelium, the ciliary cells are responsible for one of the most important defense mechanisms of the airway epithelium: the transport of inhaled particles back up into the throat by coordinated ciliary movement. Changes in the cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)]i) are the main driving force controlling the ciliary activity. In mouse ...
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