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Vol. 282, Issue 1, 248-255, 1997
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Auburn University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, Alabama
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Abstract |
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Whole-cell electrophysiological studies suggest that sympathetic nerve
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors are coupled to
voltage-dependent N-type calcium channels through the Gi
family of proteins to inhibit neurotransmitter release. Because most
nerve terminals are too small for direct electrophysiological
recordings, the aim of this study was to examine the relationship
between alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated inhibition
of norepinephrine release and the rise in cytosolic calcium in neurites
from cultured sympathetic neurons. In cultured rat superior cervical
ganglion neurons, the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor
agonists, UK-14304 (0.01-10 µM) and oxymetazoline (0.1-10 µM),
and the N-type calcium channel blocker,
-conotoxin GVIA (0.1-10
nM), inhibited the release of tritiated norepinephrine in response to
electrical stimulation (1 Hz, 30 pulses, 0.1 ms, 70 V). The inhibitory
effect of the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists was
not altered by pretreatment with pertussis toxin (200 ng/ml, 18 h), although pertussis toxin blocked the inhibition of
forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation by UK-14304. In fura-2 loaded
cells, electrical stimulation (1 Hz, 30 pulses, 0.1 ms, 70 V) increased
cytosolic calcium in sympathetic neuronal processes. Blockade of N-type
calcium channels with
-conotoxin (1 and 10 nM) reduced the rise in
cytosolic calcium by 25 ± 3% and 52 ± 6%, respectively,
whereas UK-14304 and oxymetazoline did not alter the electrically
stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium. These data suggest that blockade
of N-type calcium channels with
-conotoxin GVIA inhibits stimulated
norepinephrine release and cytosolic calcium measured with fura-2 at
similar concentrations, whereas activation of alpha-2
adrenergic receptor inhibits norepinephrine release by a pathway that
is insensitive to pertussis toxin and changes in cytosolic calcium in
neurites from cultured rat superior cervical ganglion cells.
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Introduction |
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It is well accepted that
depolarization-induced release of neurotransmitter from nerves is
dependent on the influx of extracellular calcium through
voltage-sensitive calcium channels (Katz, 1969
). In sympathetic nerves,
N-type calcium channels are thought to mediate calcium influx
responsible for norepinephrine release, and whole-cell recordings
demonstrate that activation of ganglionic alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors decrease the calcium current through these channels (Hirning
et al., 1988
). In rat and chick sympathetic ganglia (Beech
et al., 1992
; Schofield, 1990
, 1991
; Song et al., 1989
), isolated frog sympathetic ganglia (Lipscombe et al.,
1989
) and mouse neuroblastoma × rat glioma hybrid cells
(NG108-15) (McFadzean et al., 1989
), activation of
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors inhibits the calcium current
evoked by depolarization. In fura-2 loaded cultured sympathetic
neurons, Bhave et al. (1990)
report that high concentrations
of norepinephrine inhibit stimulated norepinephrine release and
completely block depolarization-induced calcium influx in the growth
cone but not in the cell body of the neuron. Recently, Dolezal et
al. (1994)
reported that alpha-2 adrenergic receptor stimulation inhibits nicotine-stimulated influx of calcium in cell
bodies and processes of cultured chick sympathetic neurons, although
the extracellular calcium concentration was lowered to observe the
inhibitory effect.
Alpha-2 Adrenergic receptors belong to a family of
neurotransmitter receptors that transduce their biological signal
across the cell membrane by GTP-binding proteins (G-proteins) which
serve as intermediaries in transmembrane signal transduction
(Birnbaumer et al., 1990
). Pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylates a
subtype of G-protein (Gi and Go) and uncouples
the G-protein from the receptor. Pertussis toxin attenuates the
alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated decrease in cAMP
accumulation (Ui, 1988
) and vasoconstriction (Boyer et al.,
1983
), but its effect on norepinephrine release from sympathetic nerves
is controversial. In NG108-15 cells, pertussis toxin inhibits alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated reduction in cAMP
accumulation through Gi and decreases calcium influx
through Go. The alpha-2 adrenergic receptor
coupled to calcium channels in frog ganglia (Lipscombe et
al., 1989
), potassium efflux in rat locus ceruleus (Aghajanian and
Wang, 1986
) and the inhibition of norepinephrine release in brain
slices (Allgaier et al., 1985
) is sensitive to pertussis
toxin, which implicates a member of the Gi protein family in these responses. On the other hand, pertussis toxin does not alter
alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated inhibition of
norepinephrine release in rat vas deferens or atria (Docherty, 1990
),
mouse atria (Musgrave et al., 1987
) or in the pithed rat
(Docherty, 1988
). The reason for the differences in the ability of
pertussis toxin to block the inhibition of transmitter release elicited
by alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation is unclear but may
represent differences in the mechanism by which the receptor inhibits
neurotransmitter release in various tissues or possible differences in
receptor subtypes.
The present study sought to examine the role of changes in cytosolic calcium in mediating the inhibition of norepinephrine release by alpha-2 adrenergic agonists in neurites from cultured rat sympathetic neurons. Because most neuronal terminals are too small for electrophysiological recordings, cultured superior cervical ganglion neurons were loaded with fura-2 and the rise in cytosolic calcium in response to electrical stimulation was determined in neurite processes. Similar electrical stimulation parameters were used for the measurement of norepinephrine release and the rise in cytosolic calcium to correlate these changes with activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors and blockade of N-type calcium channels. The data from this study suggest that activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors inhibits norepinephrine release by a pertussis toxin-insensitive pathway in cultured rat sympathetic neurons without altering cytosolic calcium measured with fura-2.
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Methods |
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Cell isolation.
Superior cervical ganglia (SCG) were removed
from 1- to 2-day-old Sprague-Dawley (Harlan) rat pups as described
previously (Schwartz and Malik, 1991
). The SCG were placed in L-15
media and cleaned of blood vessels and connective tissue. The SCG were incubated with collagenase D (1 mg/ml) (Boerhinger Mannheim,
Indianapolis, IN) at 37°C for 30 min, washed three times with L-15
media and resuspended in M-199 media containing 10% heat-inactivated
newborn calf serum, glutamine (1.0 mM), penicillin (100 U/ml),
streptomycin (100 µg/ml), uridine and 5-fluoro-2
-deoxyuridine
(2 × 10
5 M) and nerve growth factor (50 ng/ml). SCG were mechanically dissociated by trituration through a
reduced bore Pasteur pipet. SCGCs were plated on 6 × 15 mm strips
of collagen-coated plastic constructed from tissue culture plates at a
density of about 20,000 cells/plastic strip for release studies and on
collagen-coated round glass coverslips for intracellular calcium
studies. Media were changed every 2 to 3 days, and experiments were
performed 7 to10 days after plating.
Norepinephrine release.
Norepinephrine release experiments
were carried out essentially as described (Schwartz and Malik, 1993b
).
To label endogenous neuronal norepinephrine stores, media were removed,
and SCGCs incubated for 2 h in 1 ml of BSS-HEPES containing 220 nM
[3H]NE (3 µCi/ml) with 50 µg/ml ascorbic acid
(approximately 4.2 × 106 dpm/ml). BSS-HEPES contained
(millimoles/liter): NaCl, 137; KCl, 5.4; CaCl2, 1.8;
MgCl2, 1.1; HEPES, 25 (pH 7.4) and
D-(+)-glucose, 5.6. After loading, SCGCs were placed in an
enclosed apparatus and gently superfused at the rate of 500 µl/min
with BSS-HEPES warmed to 37°C containing 1 µM desmethylimipramine
to block neuronal re-uptake of NE. Platinum electrodes attached to a
Grass S44 stimulator (Quincy, MA) were positioned on either side of
each plastic strip. Three periods of EFS were applied (1 Hz, 30 pulses,
0.1 ms duration, 70 V) at 20-min intervals after initiation of
superfusion. The first stimulation was not used for experimental
purposes. The next two stimulations were designated S1 and S2 and were
used for experimental purposes. S1 was control in which no drug was added. To examine the effects of drugs on EFS-induced increases in
fractional tritium overflow, the drug or its vehicle was added to the
BSS-HEPES in the desired final molar concentration and allowed to
superfuse the cells for 8 min before S2. Superfusate was collected
throughout the experiment. At the conclusion of the experiment SCGCs
were dissolved in 2 ml 1 M NaOH. An aliquot of cell and superfusate
samples was measured for tritium content by scintillation counting with
Ultima-Gold (Packard Instrument Co., Downers Grove, IL) in a Beckman
scintillation counter. The overflow of tritium was expressed as the
fractional amount of that present in the cells (fractional tritium
overflow). The increase in fractional tritium overflow in response to
EFS was determined by subtracting the fractional overflow for 2.5 min
before stimulation (Basal) from the fractional overflow for 30 s
during and 2 min immediately after EFS. The increase in fractional
overflow in S2 was then expressed as a ratio of that in S1 (S2/S1).
Explant studies. This series of experiments was performed to determine the effect of UK-14304 on [3H]NE release in isolated neurites from cultured explants of superior cervical ganglia. Ganglia were isolated and incubated with collagenase as described. The ganglia were placed on collagen-coated plastic strips as described above for ganglion cells. The explants were allowed to adhere to the coverslips overnight in a small amount of medium before additional medium was added. Explants were cultured for 7 to 10 days. On the day of the experiment, the neurites were carefully severed from the explants by a scalpel under low-power magnification of an inverted microscope and the explants removed with fine forceps. The release of [3H]NE in the remaining neurites was carried out as described above for neuronal cells.
Cytosolic calcium measurement.
Calcium measurements were
performed on multiple small neurites from cultured ganglion cells
loaded with the fluorescent calcium indicator fura-2. SCGCs were plated
in the center of collagen-coated round glass coverslips (0.11 mm thick,
31 mm diameter, Biophysica Technologies, Inc., Sparks, MD) for 7 to 10 days as described above. Cells were loaded with fura-2 by incubation
with 3 µM fura 2-AM for 30 min in culture media at 37°C followed by
a 20-min incubation in BSS-HEPES supplemented with 25 mg/l bovine serum albumin at room temperature in the dark. Coverslips containing the
loaded cells were fixed on a Biophysica Tissue Chamber, and 1 ml
HEPES-BSS containing sulfinpyrazone (100 µM, as an anion-exchange inhibitor) was added to the well and the chamber mounted on the stage
of a Nikon Daiphot microscope. Buffer temperature was maintained at
37°C by a ThermAdapt digital thermoregulator (Biophysica
Technologies, Inc.). Loaded cells were visualized with a Nikon Fluor40
or Fluor100 phase-contrast oil immersion objective. A Photon Technology
International (PTI) model RF-M2010 ratio fluorescence system consisting
of a single monochromator-based illuminator coupled to a Nikon
epifluorescence microscope with OSCAR software was used for all ratio
fluorescence. Excitation wavelengths were alternated between 340 nm and
380 nm. Emission intensities were measured at 510 nm. The 340:380 ratios of emitted fluorescence were calculated for each time point, and
calcium concentration was estimated according to the following equation: [Ca++]i = Kd ×
(F380 max/F380 min) × [((R
Rmin)/(Rmax
R)] with a Kd value for fura-2 of
225 nM (Grynkiewiecz et al., 1985
). At the end of the
experiment, Rmax was determined with 20 µM
ionomycin and Rmin with 10 mM EGTA. Two platinum
wire electrodes connected to a Grass S48 Stimulator were placed in the
well on both sides of the cells for EFS (1 Hz, 10 pulses, 0.1 ms
duration, 70 V). Cells were electrically stimulated first in the
absence and then in the presence of various pharmacological agents or
their vehicle which were added directly to the tissue chamber in
10-µl bolus doses to obtain the desired final molar concentration.
Basal calcium measurements were calculated by averaging intracellular
calcium for five successive periods before electrical stimulation. The peak rise in cytosolic calcium was calculated by averaging cytosolic calcium for five successive periods during electrical stimulation. The
peak rise in cytosolic calcium above base line in response to
electrical stimulation was calculated by subtracting the average basal
cytosolic calcium from the average maximum rise in cytosolic calcium in
response to electrical stimulation. The peak rise in cytosolic calcium
was used for statistical analysis.
cAMP accumulation.
cAMP was measured essentially as
described (Schwartz and Malik, 1993b
). To determine cellular cAMP
accumulation, medium was removed and the cells incubated in BSS-HEPES
containing 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine for 30 min. Agonists or
vehicle were added during the first 10-min period and remained in the
BSS-HEPES for an additional 10 min in which forskolin was added. The
experiment was stopped by placing the cells in ice-cold 50 mM sodium
acetate (pH 4.0) and immediately freezing on dry ice.
80°C until assayed. To process the cells for
cAMP accumulation measurements, samples were thawed, cells scraped and
the extract boiled in a water bath for 3 min. The extract was
centrifuged in an Eppendorf microfuge for 5 min. and the supernatant
used to estimate cAMP accumulation. cAMP was detected by standard
radioimmunoassay techniques.
Analysis of data. Differences in fractional overflow ratios and changes from basal levels for cytosolic calcium and cAMP accumulation were expressed as mean and S.E.M. and compared with the Student's t test.
Drugs.
Tissue culture media and serum were purchased from
Mediatech, Inc. (Herndon, VA), nerve growth factor from Harlan
Bioproducts (Indianapolis, IN) and tissue culture supplements from
Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). The following drugs used in this
study were purchased: tritiated NE
L-[lsqb]7-3H(N)] (NE specific activity,
10-30 Ci/mmol, New England Nuclear, Boston, MA), Fura-2 AM (Molecular
Bioprobes, Eugene, OR),
-conotoxin GVIA, Conus geographus
(Calbiochem, San Diego, CA), UK-14304
(5-bromo-N-(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-6-quinoxalinamine), Idazoxan
hydrochloride ((±)-2-(1,4-benzodioxan-2-yl)-2-imidazoline hydrochloride) and oxymetazoline hydrochloride (Research Biochemicals International, Natick, MA).
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Results |
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Effect of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists on
electrically induced release of tritiated NE.
Cultured superior
cervical ganglion cells loaded with [3H]NE were
superfused, electrically stimulated (1 Hz, 10 pulses, 0.1 ms, 70 V) and
the superfusate collected. The tritium released in response to
electrical stimulation has previously been demonstrated to be
predominantly intact [3H]NE (Schwartz and Malik, 1993b
).
In control experiments, the fractional tritium overflow ratio (S2/S1)
in response to electrical stimulation was 1.09 ± 0.09. Addition
of the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists, UK-14304
(0.01-10 µM) or oxymetazoline (0.1-10 µM) to the superfusion
buffer 8 min before S2 had no effect on basal tritium overflow but
dose-dependently inhibited the increase in fractional tritium overflow
in response to electrical stimulation (fig. 1). UK-14304
(10 µM) and oxymetazoline (10 µM) reduced stimulated norepinephrine
release by 58 ± 4% and 66 ± 3%, respectively. The alpha-2 adrenergic receptor antagonist, idazoxan (10 µM)
alone had no effect on basal or stimulated fractional tritium release but attenuated the inhibition of stimulated [3H]NE
release by UK-14304 and oxymetazoline (fig. 1, insert).
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Effect of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists on
stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium in neurites of ganglion
cells.
Cytosolic calcium was measured in neurites of ganglion
cells loaded with fura-2. In each experiment, two stimulations were conducted (S1, S2). Basal cytosolic calcium in neurites was 114 ± 15 nM. EFS (1 Hz, 10 pulses, 70 V, 0.1-ms duration) caused a rapid
increase in cytosolic calcium that returned to base line after the
stimulation (fig. 2). The increase in cytosolic calcium in response to electrical stimulation between different cell
populations was variable (range, 50-230 nM). However, the S2/S1 ratio
for the rise in cytosolic calcium above base line in response to
electrical stimulation was 1.04 ± 0.05. Figure 2A depicts a
tracing from an individual experiment in which the stimulated rise in
cytosolic calcium was measured in neurites before and after the
administration of UK-14304 (1 µM). UK-14304 added 10 min before the
second stimulation had no effect on basal or the stimulated peak rise
in cytosolic calcium. Oxymetazoline (0.1-100 µM) also did not affect
on basal or stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium. The relationship
between the effect of UK-14304 (1-10 µM) on peak stimulated rise in
cytosolic calcium and the inhibition of [3H]NE release is
depicted in figure 3. UK-14304 reduced electrically stimulated NE release but did not decrease cytosolic calcium as measured with fura-2. The same relationship was observed with oxymetazoline as the agonist.
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Effect of the N-type calcium channel antagonist,
-conotoxin
GVIA, on NE release and the rise in cytosolic calcium.
To
determine the effect of N-type calcium channel blockade on stimulated
NE release and the rise in cytosolic calcium, the N-type calcium
channel blocker
-conotoxin GVIA was used. In [3H]NE
loaded neurons,
-conotoxin GVIA (0.1-10 nM) had no effect on basal
tritium overflow but significantly inhibited the fractional tritium
overflow elicited by electrical stimulation (fig. 4).
-Conotoxin GVIA (10 nM) reduced stimulated release of norepinephrine by 72 ± 5%. In neurites from fura-2 loaded cells,
-conotoxin GVIA (1-10 nM) significantly attenuated the peak rise in cytosolic calcium elicited by electrical stimulation (figs. 2B and 4).
-Conotoxin (10 nM) inhibited the rise in cytosolic calcium in
response to electrical stimulation by 54 ± 4%.
-Conotoxin
GVIA produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of both cytosolic
calcium and NE release over the same concentration range (fig. 4).
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Effect of pertussis toxin on cAMP accumulation and neurotransmitter
release in response to alpha-2 adrenergic receptor
activation.
SCGCs were incubated with pertussis toxin (200 ng/ml,
18 h) or vehicle and cAMP accumulation and NE release measured in
separate experiments. Basal and forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation was not significantly different between vehicle- and pertussis toxin-treated cells (fig. 5). UK-14304 (10 µM) did not
affect basal cAMP accumulation but attenuated the increase in cAMP
accumulation produced by forskolin in vehicle-treated cells. In
pertussis toxin-treated cells, UK-14304 had no effect on
forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation.
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Discussion |
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The aim of this study was to determine whether activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors inhibits NE release by reducing cytosolic calcium through a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein in neurites from cultured rat superior cervical ganglion cell. NE release was measured in superfused cultured sympathetic neurons and isolated neurites of ganglia explants loaded with [3H]NE. Cytosolic calcium was measured in neurites of cultured cells loaded with fura-2. Electrical stimulation was used to elicit increases in NE release and cytosolic calcium. The data from this study suggest that blockade of N-type calcium channels inhibits both NE release and the rise in cytosolic calcium. However, inhibition of NE release by alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists occurs independent of a reduction in cytosolic calcium concentration as measured with fura-2 and was insensitive to pertussis toxin treatment. These data suggest that at least part of the effect of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation is mediated by a signaling cascade independent of the Gi family of proteins and changes in cytosolic calcium in cultured rat sympathetic nerves.
UK-14304 and oxymetazoline inhibited fractional tritium overflow in
response to electrical stimulation (1 Hz, 30 pulses, 0.1-ms duration,
70 V). The inhibition of NE release by UK-14304 and oxymetazoline was
attenuated by the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor antagonists,
idazoxan and yohimbine, which suggests that UK-14304 and oxymetazoline
activated alpha-2 adrenergic receptors. Idazoxan alone had
no effect on either the stimulated release of tritium or the rise in
cytosolic calcium, which suggests a lack of negative feedback control
from released NE at these stimulation parameters. A similar lack of
autoinhibition in chick sympathetic neurons has been reported by Boehm
et al. (1991)
.
To determine whether activation of alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors and/or blockade of N-type calcium channels decreased NE
release by reducing the stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium, cells
were loaded with fura-2 and cytosolic calcium monitored in neurites during electrical stimulation. The effect of these agents on cytosolic calcium were then related to their effects on NE release. The stimulation parameters for NE release and cytosolic calcium experiments were similar except for the number of impulses used (10 impulses for
cytosolic calcium and 30 impulses for NE release). Electrical stimulation (1 Hz, 10 pulses) increased cytosolic calcium 137 ± 16 nM above base line. This rise in cytosolic calcium is similar to
that reported by Przywara et al. (1991
, 1993a
, b) for
electrical stimulation in neurites of cultured chick sympathetic
nerves. In the present study, both UK-14304 and oxymetazoline
dose-dependently inhibited fractional tritium overflow with the maximum
effect occurring at 1 and 10 µM, respectively. Over the same
concentration range, neither UK-14304 nor oxymetazoline reduced the
rise in cytosolic calcium concentration in response to electrical
stimulation. Other frequencies of stimulation were also used. Elevation
of cytosolic calcium in response to 1 pulse and 5 Hz (25 pulses) was
not affected by UK-14304 or oxymetazoline (data not shown). Therefore,
under conditions in which alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation inhibited electrically stimulated NE release, no measurable change in cytosolic calcium with fura-2 was detected.
One explanation for our inability to detect changes in cytosolic
calcium in response to alpha-2 adrenergic receptor
activation may be related to our experimental design. We used fura-2 to
measure cytosolic calcium as an index of calcium influx into neuronal processes. It was assumed that if alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors are negatively coupled to N-type calcium channels and these
channels mediate the influx of calcium into the nerve terminal, then
inhibition of these channels would decrease the influx of calcium into
the neurites and the cytosolic calcium concentration. The use of fura-2 is a popular approach to assessing cytosolic calcium signaling in many
cells including neurons. There are, however, some limitations to the
use of this compound in assessing cytosolic calcium changes related to
neurotransmitter release. Augustine et al. (1992)
have reported that the presynaptic calcium concentrations measured with
fura-2 may not represent the source of calcium responsible for
neurotransmitter release. In that study, when EGTA was injected into
squid "giant" presynaptic nerve terminals, neurotransmitter release
was not altered, yet the rise in presynaptic calcium detected by fura-2
was blocked, which suggests that the calcium responsible for release
may be localized. Therefore, the use of fura-2 to monitor changes in
calcium influx responsible for NE release in neurites from sympathetic
neurons may not distinguish whether inhibition of these channels
accounts for a decrease in NE release. We attempted to circumvent this
apparent limitation of fura-2 by examining whether direct blockade of
N-type calcium channels with
-conotoxin GVIA altered the cytosolic
calcium concentration measured with fura-2 and whether this change in
cytosolic calcium related to a change in NE release. Blockade of N-type
calcium channels with
-conotoxin GVIA reduced both the electrically
stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium measure with fura-2 and NE
release. The inhibition of both parameters were within the same
concentration range. Therefore, in our experiments, blockade of N-type
calcium channels and the resultant decrease in calcium influx results in a decrease in cytosolic calcium measured by fura-2. This decrease in
fura-2-detected cytosolic calcium also can be correlated with a
reduction in NE release. Whether the absolute cytosolic calcium concentration measured with fura-2 after application of
-conotoxin GVIA is the calcium that triggers NE release is subject to contention; however, there does appear to be a relationship between cytosolic calcium measured with fura-2 and NE release. On the other hand, activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors with UK-14304 and
oxymetazoline did not alter the stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium
despite inhibiting NE release. The inhibition of release produced by
the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonists was similar to that
produced by
-conotoxin GVIA. This would suggest that if
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors were coupled to N-type calcium
channels to inhibit the influx of calcium to decrease NE release, then
activation of these receptors should have sufficiently decreased the
activity of these channels to decrease cytosolic calcium in a manner
similar to
-conotoxin GVIA.
Another explanation for the lack of effect of alpha-2
adrenergic receptor activation on cytosolic calcium could be that
calcium measurements were taken in areas that either do not possess
N-type calcium channels, do not release NE or do not have
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors. The observation that
-conotoxin GVIA decreased the stimulated rise in cytosolic calcium
indicates that these neurites possess N-type calcium channels. But do
the neurites themselves possess alpha-2 adrenergic receptors
and do these neurites release NE? Przywara et al. (1993a)
have reported that [3H]NE is preferentially taken up and
released by neurites and not cell bodies in explants of cultured
sympathetic ganglia. In the present study, a similar approach was taken
in that the effect of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation
on NE release was assessed in isolated neurites from explanted ganglia.
In the isolated neurite preparation which was devoid of cell bodies,
activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors with UK-14304
inhibited the electrically stimulated release of NE to an extent
similar to that seen in the intact neuronal population. These data
indicate that neurites from sympathetic explants possess
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors that are coupled to a signaling
cascade that inhibits NE release. In these neurites, however,
activation of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors do not reduce the
rise in cytosolic calcium.
The pertussis toxin sensitivity of the alpha-2 adrenergic
receptor-mediated inhibition of NE release was also examined in this
study. Pretreatment of SCGC with pertussis toxin (200 ng/ml, 18 h)
did not affect the basal overflow of [3H]NE but
significantly enhanced stimulated NE release, which suggests that
Gi/Go tonically inhibits NE release in
sympathetic nerves. This potentiating effect of pertussis toxin has
been demonstrated by others in sympathetic nerves (Hill et
al., 1993
; Ikeda, 1991
) and adrenal chromaffin cells
(Ohara-Imaizumi et al., 1992
; Sontag et al., 1991
). In
insulin-secreting HIT-T15 cells, the transient expression of
constitutively active mutants of G
i1,
G
i2, G
i3 and
G
o2 inhibit insulin release, which supports the notion that Gi/Go is inhibitory on
secretion (Lang et al., 1995
). In the present study,
Gi/Go appear to be tonically active, because
inactivation with pertussis toxin enhances stimulated NE release. The
tonic inhibition of NE release by Gi/Go,
however, is not mediated by tonic activation of alpha-2
adrenergic receptors for two reasons. First, alpha-2
adrenergic receptor antagonists did not enhance NE release as would be
expected if released NE was activating these receptors. Second, the
inhibition of NE release caused by alpha-2 adrenergic
receptor activation was not sensitive to pertussis toxin. The mechanism
for this tonic inhibition of NE release is presently unknown.
The effect of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation on
stimulated NE release has been reported to be both pertussis toxin sensitive (Allgaier et al., 1985
; Boehm et al., 1992
) and
insensitive (Docherty, 1988
,1990
; Hill et al., 1993
; Murphy
and Majewski, 1989
). Along these same lines, cells display differing
pertussis toxin sensitivities to alpha-2 adrenergic
receptor-mediated inhibition of calcium currents (Boehm et
al., 1992
; Plummer et al., 1991
; Schofield, 1990
, 1991
;
Song et al., 1989
, 1991)
. In the present study, the
sympathetic neuronal alpha-2 adrenergic receptor can couple
to Gi as demonstrated by the ability of pertussis toxin to
block the inhibitory effect of UK-14304 on forskolin-stimulated cAMP
accumulation. The reason for its inability to couple to
Gi/Go to decrease NE release is unknown, but
several possibilities exist. The alpha-2 adrenergic receptor
that couples to Gi to decrease cAMP accumulation may be
segregated into a compartment away from release sites such that the
population of alpha-2 adrenergic receptors that inhibit
adenylyl cyclase is different from that which inhibits NE release. The
pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein may be on the cell body, whereas
the inhibition of NE release occurs at the nerve terminal. These
receptor populations may also be composed of different subtypes that
couple with different efficiencies to the various G-proteins. However,
which if any of these explanations is correct is unknown at this time.
The mechanism for alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated
inhibition of NE release in cultured sympathetic nerves independent of
altering cytosolic calcium is unclear. In neuroendocrine cells, alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation has been demonstrated
to directly inhibit the exocytotic process independent of a rise in
cytosolic calcium (Gilon et al., 1993
; Hsu et
al., 1991
; Lang et al., 1995
; Wollheim and Sharp,
1981
). Actin polymerization in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells has been
implicated in regulating accessibility of secretory granules to the
plasma membrane before exocytosis (Trifaro and Vitale, 1993
). Treatment
of chromaffin cells with phorbol esters causes a disruption of the
actin cytoskeleton and potentiates nicotine-stimulated catecholamine
release (Vitale et al., 1992
). Of particular interest is a
recent report that activation of alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors results in an increase in F-actin formation in
insulin-secreting HIT-T15 cells (Cable et al., 1995
). The
authors suggest that regulation of F-actin formation could contribute
to the mechanisms by which alpha-2 adrenergic receptors
inhibit insulin secretion independent of cytosolic calcium
concentrations. Whether this mechanism occurs in sympathetic nerves is
unknown, but activation of protein kinase C has been shown to enhance
NE release as well as block the inhibitory effects of
alpha-2 receptor activation in sympathetic nerves (Schwartz and Malik, 1993a
).
Whether activation of presynaptic alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors inhibits NE release by decreasing the influx of calcium
through voltage-sensitive N-type calcium channels remains
controversial. With use of fluorescent calcium indicator dyes to
measure cytosolic calcium, studies to date have reported complete
(Bhave et al., 1990
), partial (Dolezal et al.,
1995) and no blockade (this study) of the stimulated rise in cytosolic
calcium by alpha-2 adrenergic receptors. Bhave et
al. (1990)
reported that 30 µM NE reduced the electrically
stimulated release of NE in cultured rat neurons, but completely
blocked the rise in cytosolic calcium in the growth cone region.
Whether this blockade of the calcium current was sensitive to
alpha-2 adrenergic receptor antagonism and why a complete
blockade of the rise in cytosolic calcium still produced an increase in
NE release, however, was not discussed. Dolezol et al.
(1995) reported that in terminals of chicken sympathetic neurons, in
the presence of reduced extracellular calcium (0.13 mM), UK-14304 (10 µM) decreased the release of NE and cytosolic calcium elicited by
nicotinic receptor activation. A reduction in extracellular calcium was
necessary to detect both an effect of UK-14304 on release and cytosolic
calcium because of a significant degree of autoinhibition from
endogenously released NE. In our study, autoinhibition due to released
NE was negligible because blockade of alpha-2 adrenergic
receptors neither enhanced electrically stimulated NE release nor the
rise in cytosolic calcium. Additionally, activation of
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors decreased stimulated NE release
but did not affect cytosolic calcium, whereas
-conotoxin GVIA
inhibited both stimulated NE release and the rise in calcium. It
appears that more studies with different techniques as well as
different calcium dye indicators are necessary to determine the role of
calcium in mediating the inhibition of NE release by presynaptic
alpha-2 adrenergic receptors.
In conclusion, the concentration range of UK-14304 and oxymetazoline
that reduced fractional tritium overflow in cultured rat superior
cervical ganglion cells did not reduce the rise in cytosolic calcium in
response to electrical stimulation; whereas
-conotoxin decreased
cytosolic calcium and NE release at similar concentrations.
Additionally, although pertussis toxin blocked the inhibitory effect of
UK-14304 on forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation, it did not block
the alpha-2 adrenergic receptor-mediated inhibition of NE
release. These data suggest that at least part of the inhibitory effect
of alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activation is mediated by a
pertussis toxin-insensitive signaling cascade independent of a change
in cytosolic calcium in cultured rat sympathetic neurites.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Leslie C. Allen for excellent technical assistance
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication March 17, 1997.
Received for publication July 23, 1996.
1 This work was supported by Grant-in-Aid 93010200 from the American Heart Association.
Send reprint requests to: Dean D. Schwartz, Auburn University, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, AL 36849.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
cyclic AMP, cAMP;
norepinephrine, NE;
SCG, superior cervical ganglia;
SCGCs, SCG cells;
HEPES, N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N
-ethanesulfonic acid;
BSS-HEPES, balanced
salt solution supplemented with HEPES;
EFS, electrical field
stimulation;
EGTA, ethyleneglycol-bis(
-aminoethyl
ether)-N,N,N
,N
-tetraacetic acid.
| |
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