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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 360-369, May 2000
1E-Type Ca2+
Current in Xenopus Oocytes1
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Virginia Health Science System, Charlottesville, Virginia
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Abstract |
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The effect of the volatile anesthetics (VAs) halothane (0.59 mM) and
isoflurane (0.70 mM) on protein kinase C (PKC)-mediated modulation of
1E type of high-voltage-gated Ca2+ channels was examined
in Xenopus oocytes coexpressing m1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) or
1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol (DOG) was used to activate PKC
directly, whereas indirect activation was induced with
acetyl-
-methylcholine (MCh). The interaction between PKC activators
and VAs was examined by perfusing either VA before, during, or after
the administration of PMA, DOG, or MCh. In addition, the effect of VAs
was studied after the down-regulation of PKC. The application of VAs
inhibited Ba2+ current (IBa),
whereas PMA (500 nM), DOG (100 µM), or MCh (1 and 10 µM) markedly
potentiated IBa. VAs inhibited PMA- or
DOG-enhanced IBa to the same extent as seen
in controls. The inhibition of IBa induced
by VAs was not reversed by PMA or DOG. The administration of VAs in
combination with PMA, DOG, or MCh (1 µM) led to the inhibition of
IBa. MCh (10 µM) counteracted the
inhibitory effect of VAs when administered together and reversed the
inhibition of IBa produced by VAs. These
differences in the responses between PMA and MCh (10 µM) may be based
on the involvement of various pools of PKC. It is suggested that VAs
act directly at the membrane, because they blocked the membrane-based
action of PMA, whereas the receptor-based action of MCh was only
partially blocked. It is possible that some PKC isoforms may not be a
direct target of VAs.
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Introduction |
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Using
biochemical, electrophysiological, and molecular biological techniques,
a number of membrane signaling proteins have been shown to be affected
by volatile anesthetics (VAs). Among membrane proteins, ligand-gated
ion channels such as
-aminobutyric acidA (Lin
et al., 1992
), nicotinic (Scheller et al., 1997
), and N-methyl-D-aspartate (Yamamura et al.,
1990
) receptors; G protein-linked receptors such as muscarinic
receptors (Durieux, 1995
); protein kinase C (PKC; Hemmings and Adamo,
1994
; Slater et al., 1997
); and voltage-gated ion channels (Franks and
Lieb, 1994
) are all the possible candidates. Ca2+
current through high-voltage-gated calcium channels (HVGCCs) has been
shown to be inhibited by VAs in several preparations such as myocardial
tissue (Lynch et al., 1981
; Terrar and Victory, 1988b
; Bosnjak et al.,
1991
; Pancrazio, 1996
), neurons (Study, 1994
), and secretory cells
(Pancrazio et al., 1993
; McDowell et al., 1996
). Recently, it has been
shown that the VAs halothane (HAL) and isoflurane (ISO) have a common
inhibitory effect on the voltage-dependent opening of P/Q, L, N, and R
types of HVGCCs expressed in isolation in Xenopus
laevis oocytes (Kamatchi et al., 1999
). In contrast,
consensus regarding VA effects on PKC activity has remained elusive.
For example, the activity of PKC was stimulated by HAL in synaptosomes
and brain cytosol (Tsuchiya et al., 1988
; Hemmings and Adamo, 1996
),
and VA activation of PKC has been suggested to inhibit m1 muscarinic
receptors (Minami et al., 1997
). On the other hand, VAs and alcohol
were shown to inhibit PKC and to prevent its translocation to the
membrane (Slater et al., 1997
). In view of such conflicting findings
regarding the action of PKC, we elected to examine how VAs would
influence PKC modulation of HVGCCs.
Isolated expression of HVGCCs in X. laevis oocytes revealed
that PKC activation potentiated
1E and
1B channel currents, whereas
1A and
1C currents were unaltered (Stea et al., 1995a
). Immunocytochemical studies have shown that
1E subunit is widely distributed in the brain and potentially modulated by phosphorylation with PKC in addition to other kinases (Yokoyama et al., 1995
). Therefore,
1E- type channels were used as a model to study the effect of VAs on PKC-enhanced opening of the HVGCCs by expressing them
in X. laevis oocytes. The oocyte model provides a convenient assay system for investigating the modulation of cloned ion channels because these cells endogenously express constituents of several second-messenger pathways, including protein kinase A and PKC. In this
investigation, PKC was activated directly by the application of
phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) or
1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol (DOG) or indirectly with
acetyl-
-methylcholine (MCh), an m1 muscarinic receptor agonist. The
influence of VAs on
1E channels was studied before, during, or after
the application of PKC activators. In addition, the effects of VAs were
examined after PKC was depleted from the oocytes.
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Materials and Methods |
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Oocyte Harvesting and Microinjection.
Mature female X. laevis frogs were obtained from Xenopus I (Ann Arbor, MI), housed
in an established frog colony, and fed regular frog brittle twice
weekly. For the removal of oocytes, a frog was anesthetized in 500 ml
of 0.2% 3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester (Sigma Chemical Co., St.
Louis, MO) in water until unresponsive to a painful stimulus. The
anesthetized frog was placed supine on ice, and an incision of ~1.5
cm long was made through both the skin and muscle layers of one lower
abdominal quadrant. A section of the ovary was exteriorized, and a
lobule of oocytes (~200) was removed. The wound was closed in two
layers, and the animal was allowed to recover from anesthesia, kept in a separate tank overnight, and returned to the colony the next day. The
oocytes were washed twice in Ca2+-free solution
(82.5 mM NaCl, 2 mM KCl, 1.8 mM MgCl2, 5 mM
HEPES, pH 7.5), followed by collagenase (type 1A; Sigma Chemical Co.) treatment (1 mg/ml in Ca2+-free solution). The
oocytes were agitated in this solution for a period of 2 to 3 h at
room temperature to remove the follicular cell layer. Defolliculation
was confirmed by microscopic examination. The oocytes were washed twice
in Ca2+-free solution and transferred to modified
Barth's solution (88 mM NaCl, 1 mM KCl, 2.4 mM
NaHCO3, 0.41 mM CaCl2, 0.30 mM CaNO3, 0.82 mM MgSO4, 15 mM HEPES,
pH 7.4) containing 10 µg/ml gentamycin sulfate. They were allowed to
recover for 3 to 10 h at 16°C before cDNA injection. Nuclear
(germinal vesicle) injection (Nanoject; Drummond Scientific Co.,
Broomall, PA) was performed using 9.2 nl of a 1:1:1 mix (molar ratio;
not exceeding a total of 3 ng of cDNA) of rat brain
1E,
1B, and
2/
cDNA subunits subcloned in the mammalian expression vector
pMT2 (Stea et al., 1995a
). For the coexpression of muscarinic m1
receptor with the Ca2+ channel, 1 ng of rat m1
receptor cDNA subcloned in pcDNA 3.1 (InVitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) was
included with the above mix. The oocytes were returned to Barth's
solution and incubated at 16°C for 6 to 8 days before current recording.
Electrophysiological Recording.
Macroscopic currents were
recorded using the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique with an
Axoclamp 2A amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). The
amplifier was linked to an interface and an IBM-PC compatible computer
equipped with pClamp software (version 5.6; Axon Instruments) for data
acquisition. Leak currents were subtracted using the P/4 procedure.
Microelectrodes were filled with 3 M CsCl; typical resistances were 0.5 to 2.5 M
. KCl-Agar bridges were used as ground electrodes to
minimize any junction potential attributable to changes in ionic
composition of the bath solution. The oocytes were placed in a
recording chamber (500-µl volume) and superfused at a rate of 5 ml/min with recording solution containing 40 mM
Ba(OH)2, 50 mM NaOH, 2 mM KOH, 5 mM HEPES, and
0.4 mM niflumic acid, neutralized to pH 7.4 with methanesulfonic acid.
Ba2+ was used as the channel-permeant ion, and
niflumic acid was included in the recording solution to block intrinsic
Ca2+-activated Cl
channels. IBa was elicited for a
duration of 850 ms by depolarizing the oocytes to 0 mV from a holding
potential of
80 mV. Appropriate current-voltage relations for these
currents were confirmed before drug application.
Equilibration with VAs.
Output of HAL or ISO from calibrated
anesthetic-specific vaporizers was bubbled through a reservoir filled
with 30 to 40 ml of superfusion solution. Air at a flow rate of 500 ml/min was used as the carrier gas, and a minimum of 7 to 10 min of
bubbling was allowed for equilibration with VA. The superfusion of the oocyte with the continuously bubbled solution was maintained throughout the recording of IBa. In the case of
combined treatment with VA and other drugs, the VA-equilibrated
superfusion solution in addition contained the final concentration of
the respective drug. Lack of significant loss of VA from the recording
chamber was verified by analysis of triplicate aqueous samples from the
chamber that equilibrated with air (1:4, air/solution) in a gas
chromatograph (Aerograph 940; Varian Analytical Instruments, Walnut
Creek, CA) calibrated with standards for HAL or ISO. Results were
converted to concentrations in liquid using aqueous/gaseous partition
coefficients at 25°C (Firestone et al., 1986
) and averaged to obtain
the values stated in the report.
Treatment Schedules.
In all oocytes exhibiting significant
IBa, measurements were obtained under
control conditions after one or two sequential drug applications and
after drug washout. Control IBa was
recorded at least 5 min after the oocyte was impaled and
IBa had stabilized. In general, the
recording solution was exchanged for 30 s (~5 chamber volumes),
and IBa was recorded 2 min after
beginning the exchange. To minimize the loss of ISO or HAL to the
atmosphere, solutions containing VA were superfused continuously. Two
to four minutes after washout of drug,
IBa was recorded. Five basic schedules of drug application, mentioned briefly later, were used to examine the
actions/interactions of PKC activators and VAs. Details of various
treatment schedules are included in the correspondingly numbered figure
legends, and the tables provide details of current amplitudes: schedule
1, control response with PKC activators (Fig. 1 and Table
1); schedule 2, administration of PKC
activators first, followed by the addition of VA (Fig.
2 and Table
2); schedule 3, administration of VA
first, followed by the addition of the activators of PKC (Fig.
3 and Table
3); schedule 4, simultaneous administration of PKC activators and VA together (Fig.
4 and Table 4); and schedule 5, effect of VA in
PKC-depleted oocytes (Fig. 5 and Table
5).
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Chemicals.
HAL and ISO were purchased from Halocarbon
Laboratories (River Edge, NJ) and Ohmeda PPD Inc. (Liberty Corner, NJ),
respectively. PMA, 4
-phorbol-12,13-didecanoate (4
-PDDC; Research
Biochemicals, Inc., Natick, MA), and DOG (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA)
were dissolved in DMSO (0.05%). MCh (Sigma Chemical Co.) was dissolved
in distilled water. All these agents except VAs were prepared as
concentrated stock solutions and stored frozen at
20°C. They were
diluted to their final concentration in recording solution on the day of the experiment before use. Niflumic acid (Sigma Chemical Co.) was
added to the recording solution, which was stirred overnight for it to dissolve.
Data Analysis.
The peak represented the maximum amplitude of
the inward current. The current amplitude at 830 ms was arbitrarily
defined as the late current, which was used as a measure of relative
degree of channel inactivation. The data are shown as mean ± S.E., unless otherwise indicated. The data were analyzed using either
the PCS program (Pancrazio, 1993
) or Clampfit, version 6.0.2 (Axon
Instruments). Statistical significance was determined using either
Dunnett's t test or paired t test, and
P < .05 was considered significant.
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Results |
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Approximately 80% of the oocytes injected with
Ca2+-channel subunits expressed the inward
IBa on depolarization. The average peak and late IBa under control
conditions were
1784 ± 179 nA (range,
462 to
6138 nA) and
265 ± 31 nA (range,
70 to
1096 nA), respectively, with the
peak observed between
10 and 10 mV and at 62 ± 0.5 ms
(n = 52). Typically, the current became outward between
50 and 60 mV. The basic properties of this inward current are similar
to those described when cloned neuronal
1E channels from other
species were expressed in this system (Stea et al., 1995b
).
Control Response with PKC Activators (Schedule 1).
The
administration of PMA (500 nM) led to the potentiation of both the peak
and late IBa through
1E channels
(Fig. 1 and Table 1). On an average, with 500 nM PMA, the peak
IBa was increased by ~50% and the
late component was increased by ~200% compared with control. The
potentiation with PMA was observed within 1 min after its application
and was evident for up to 10 min without any significant decline; the
effect of PMA after this period was not examined. The maximum
PMA-induced potentiation was seen in ~3 min in 90% of the oocytes
and occurred in the remaining 10% between 3 and 4 min. As PMA binds to
the membrane tightly, washout for a prolonged period resulted in only a
very slow recovery toward the control values.
Administration of Activators of PKC First, Followed by VA (Schedule
2).
The results obtained in this section were a continuation of
schedule 1. HAL (0.59 mM) or ISO (0.70 mM) were additionally applied after PMA-induced potentiation was maximal (~3 min). The VAs
inhibited IBa markedly to a level
below the pre-PMA control values (~75% of pre-PMA peak
IBa control; Figs. 2 and 6A and Table
2). However, this VA-induced reduction of the PMA-potentiated
IBa was proportionally similar (peak,
51 ± 5%; late,
47 ± 3%, combined average of PMA plus
HAL and PMA plus ISO of Table 2; n = 16) to their
inhibition of control (no PMA) IBa
(peak,
57 ± 9%; late,
41 ± 16%, combined average of
HAL and ISO of Table 3; n = 18). Similar results were obtained when DOG was substituted for PMA; the potentiation induced by
DOG was reversed by HAL (Fig. 2 and Table 2). Here, again, the
fractional inhibition of DOG-potentiated
IBa was quantitatively the same as
that observed with HAL alone (Table 3). The slowing of inactivation
seen with PMA persisted despite the VA-induced depression. In summary,
HAL or ISO produced ~50% inhibition of IBa regardless of whether it was
previously enhanced by PKC activation with PMA or DOG.
Administration of VA First, Followed by Activators of PKC (Schedule
3).
As noted earlier, the administration of HAL (0.59 mM) or ISO
(0.70 mM) produced a significant inhibition (~50%) of peak and late
components of IBa compared with
control. When PMA or DOG was applied after VA (in the ongoing presence
of VA), the IBa was still inhibited to
the same extent without any significant change. The presence of either
HAL or ISO abolished the enhancing effect of PKC stimulation by PMA (or
DOG). The inhibitory effect of VAs was extended beyond the direct
effect on the
1E channels and appeared to prevent the presumed
PKC-induced phosphorylation by PMA or DOG. In all of these experiments,
the inherent depressant effects of VAs on
IBa were reversible with washing
(Figs. 3, A-C, and 6A and Table 3).
Application of PKC Activators and VA Together (Schedule 4). To determine how long VA application was required to abolish the PMA potentiation, PMA (or MCh) was applied simultaneously with VA. The administration of the combination of HAL and PMA or ISO and PMA led to a significant inhibition of the peak and late components of IBa that was reversible with washing (Figs. 4A and 6A and Table 4). Furthermore, the inhibition produced by these combinations was quantitatively identical with the effect of VAs alone (Figs. 3, A and B, and 6A and Table 3) as if no PMA was present.
The combination of VA and a lower concentration of MCh (1 µM) produced effects that are similar to those of VA and PMA. Both components of IBa were decreased in a significant and reversible manner, again displaying the inhibitory effect of VA and not the potentiation caused by MCh (Fig. 4B and Table 4). Contrarily, that trend changed when VA was combined with a higher concentration of MCh (10 µM), because the inhibitory effect of VA on the peak and late currents was no longer evident (Fig. 4C and Table 4). Obviously, the trend was toward potentiation, as the late current was at least as great as control or greater (Fig. 6B).
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Effect of VA in PKC-Depleted Oocytes (Schedule 5). The down-regulation of PKC was confirmed as the administration of PMA after the prolonged incubation of oocytes with PMA failed to produce any significant potentiation of IBa. However, in these oocytes, HAL or ISO still significantly inhibited the IBa, which was quantitatively similar to that of the effect in control oocytes. The inhibitory effects of VAs were reversible with washing (Fig. 5 and Table 5).
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Discussion |
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As previously reported, the VAs depressed currents through R-type
HVGCCs (Kamatchi et al., 1999
) encoded by the
1E subunit. This
reversible depression is similar to that seen for other expressed HVGCCs such as P/Q-type (
1A), N-type (
1B), and L-type (
1C) channels (Kamatchi et al., 1999
), as well as native
Ca2+ channels in a variety of tissues (Terrar and
Victory, 1988a
; Bosnjak et al., 1991
; Pancrazio et al., 1992
; Study,
1994
). This depression may contribute to the VA-induced anesthetic
state because nonspecific HVGCC blockade by Cd2+
as well as L-type Ca2+-channel block by verapamil
has been found to decrease the anesthetic requirements for ethanol,
pentobarbitone, and ketamine in mice (Dolin and Little, 1986
; Shen and
Sangiah, 1995
). Similarly, blockade of P-type channels causes lethargy
and stupor, and N-type channel blockade causes antinociception in mice
(Bowersox et al., 1996
; Llinás et al., 1989
).
In the present study, the application of PMA or DOG for 3 min increased
the peak and late current through the expressed
1E-type channels of
~150% and ~300%, respectively, as reported previously (Stea et
al., 1995a
). Several factors, such as an increased
Ca2+-channel conductance, probability of opening,
and channel open time, could be responsible for this potentiation. This
increased peak and late IBa were
reduced to ~50% of their respective PMA/DOG-enhanced values when the
oocytes were exposed to VA (in the presence of PMA/DOG), which
typically reduced peak and late IBa to
75 and 150%, respectively, of their respective control values (Fig.
6A). Because the late current was still greater than pre-PMA control values, the channels still show the kinetic behavior seen after the
presumed PKC-mediated phosphorylation even in the presence of VA. When
VAs were administered before PMA/DOG, the current was likewise
decreased by ~50% as shown in schedule 3 (Figs. 3 and 6A and Table
3), suggesting that VAs inhibited control as well as the
PMA/DOG-potentiated channels in a quantitatively similar manner.
The most interesting feature of the study was that PMA or DOG failed to
potentiate IBa when either agent was
perfused after VA. Similarly, PMA or a low concentration of MCh (1 µM) administered simultaneously with VAs also failed to potentiate
the IBa (Figs. 4 and 6A and Table 4).
The inhibition produced by the simultaneous application of these two
agents was quantitatively similar to the effect of VA alone and was
complete within 2 min. One possibility is the direct action on PKC
because anesthetics and alcohols, such as HAL (0.6 mM), enflurane (1 mM), and ethanol (200 mM), were shown to inhibit PKC (Slater et al.,
1993
). Since binding sites for both anesthetics/alcohols (Slater et
al., 1993
) and PMA (Ono et al., 1989
; for a review, see Quest, 1996
)
were reported to be present in the regulatory region of PKC, it is
tempting to postulate some specific antagonism in this site.
Furthermore, it has been shown that HAL (2.4 vol%) reduced the
membrane-associated PKC component in rat synaptosomal preparations
(Hemmings and Adamo, 1997
). If the action of PMA is initiated by its
binding to the membrane with subsequent interaction with PKC (Quest,
1996
), it is reasonable to relate the VA blockade of the PMA or DOG
actions to the inhibition of translocation of PKC. VAs may have
reversibly altered the atmosphere/configuration of the membrane bilayer
so that PMA would not bind within the membrane in a manner that would allow PKC activation. However, any explanation of this apparent inhibitory action of VA in blocking PMA effects must be contrasted with
the fact that the depressant action of VAs was reversed (as it was not
significant compared with control) when either VA was followed by a
high concentration of MCh (10 µM) (Figs. 3 and 6B and Table 3).
Similarly, VA-induced inhibition of
IBa was absent when a high
concentration of MCh was combined with the anesthetic (Figs. 4 and 6B
and Table 4). Thus, the effects of high and low concentrations of MCh
are qualitatively different. It is well known that m1 muscarinic
receptor stimulation activates G proteins (G
q
and G
11), which in turn activate phospholipase
C, resulting in the production of diacylglycerol (DAG) and
inositol-1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3). Although DAG
(the membrane constituent for which DOG and PMA are substitutes)
activates PKC directly, intracellular calcium concentration released
from the endoplasmic reticulum by IP3 acts as a
cofactor in the activation of conventional PKC (cPKC) isoforms (for a
review, see Caulfield, 1993
). Such a second-messenger pathway culminating in the activation of PKC and leading to the potentiation of
1E channels by 1 µM MCh (EC50) has been
shown in our previous study in which the inhibitors of any one of the
intermediaries such as the G proteins, phospholipase C,
IP3, intracellular calcium concentration, and PKC
led to blockade of the effect of MCh (G. L. Kamatchi, S. N. Tiwari, C. Lynch III, and M. E. Durieux, unpublished observations). Hence,
the possibility of an alternative pathway such as direct G
protein-mediated modulation or the involvement of any non-PKC effector
molecule in the action of MCh seems unlikely. In the present study, in
addition to 1 µM MCh, we also used 10 µM MCh because our goal was
to activate receptor-mediated PKC to the maximum. An indication for
this effect was derived from our previous study in which 12.8 µM MCh
saturated the potentiation of
1E channels (G. L. Kamatchi, S. N. Tiwari, C. Lynch III, and M. E. Durieux, unpublished observations).
All types of cPKC isoforms (
,
I,
II, and
), one isoform of
novel PKC (e.g.,
), and an atypical PKC (e.g.,
) have been shown
to be present in X. laevis oocytes (Johnson and Capco,
1997
). Among these, the
-isoform requires DAG but not
Ca2+ for its activation, whereas the
-isoform
requires neither DAG nor Ca2+ (Quest, 1996
).
These PKCs may be the target of intracellular second messengers such as
arachidonic acid and free fatty acids because they have been shown to
activate PKC independent of phosphatidylserine, DAG, and even
Ca2+ (Khan et al., 1995
). Activation of PKC need
not occur exclusively by translocation to the plasma membrane because
its translocation to the nucleus and association with cytoskeletal
elements on activation are now well documented (Quest, 1996
). Such a
possibility exists, because muscarinic agonists were shown to be
involved in the release of arachidonic acid (Axelrod, 1990
). Based on
this evidence, it is conceivable that the PKC isoform or isoforms
involved in the inhibition of PMA and low concentration of MCh by VAs
are identical or from the same source, probably cPKC, as it requires
DAG (or PMA/DOG) and Ca2+. These agents were
susceptible to VAs due to the possible disruption of the membrane
bilayer by VAs. On the contrary, the effect of a high concentration of
MCh was only partially blocked by VAs in that MCh possibly shared both
the membrane-dependent and -independent pools of PKC. Such a
possibility can only be speculated, because a good model with which to
study the changes at the level of the membrane is not available.
However, this is consistent with the finding that PKC may not be the
target of VAs as shown from the oocytes in which PKC had been
down-regulated. In this particular series of experiments, the
down-regulation of PKC was evidenced by the absence of potentiation of
IBa with the exposure to fresh PMA.
However, VAs still caused ~50% decrease in
IBa (Fig. 5 and Table 5). Based on
this evidence, it is reasonable to conclude that VAs inhibit these
1E channels independent of the existing status of the channels.
Another simple explanation exists that is more difficult to test. The
VAs and PMA, as well as DOG, are highly lipophilic in character.
Considering the high concentrations of the VAs relative to the PMA or
DOG, it is conceivable that the anesthetics somehow bind to these
agents in aqueous solution and prevent them from entering the membrane.
If this is the case, any studies in which VAs are combined with PMA
must be viewed with caution. However, examinations of PKC activity in
the combined presence of anesthetics and PMA have been performed and
have demonstrated an effect of PMA in the presence of VAs (Hemmings and
Adamo, 1994
, 1997
; Slater et al., 1997
), suggesting this possibility is unlikely.
Although the direct depression of
1E HVGCC by VAs is similar to that
reported for a number of Ca2+ channels, the
striking result observed in this study is the differing effects of VAs
on direct and indirect activation of PKC. The results from these
experiments suggest that the presumed membrane-based activation of PKC
by PMA or DOG was blocked by VAs, whereas the receptor-based PKC
activation (with a high concentration of MCh) was only partially
blocked. Although direct VA effects on proteins have received
considerable attention, the action of VAs on the cell membrane surface
or membrane protein-lipid interface have been demonstrated as well
(Miller, 1985
; Fraser et al., 1990
). Action at such a site might not
only alter ion channel behavior, possibly explaining the direct effects
on IBa, but also influence the
function of other membrane-activated components, such as PKC.
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Acknowledgments |
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We are grateful to Dr. T. P. Snutch (University of British of Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) for the supply of clones of Ca2+ channel and Dr. T. I. Bonner (Laboratory of Cell Biology, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) for muscarinic m1 receptor clone. We thank Dr. J. J. Sando (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA) for excellent suggestions during the course of this investigation. The technical assistance of Jacqueline Washington is gratefully appreciated.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication February 1, 2000.
Received for publication November 3, 1999.
1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R29-GM52387 (M.E.D.) and GM31144 (C.L.).
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Ganesan L. Kamatchi, 1877 Old Med Sch, Department of Anesthesiology, P.O. Box 800710, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA 22908-0710. E-mail: gk3p{at}virginia.edu
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Abbreviations |
|---|
VA, volatile anesthetic;
PMA, phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate;
4
-PDDC, 4
-phorbol-12,13-didecanoate;
MCh, acetyl-
-methylcholine;
PKC, protein kinase C;
cPKC, conventional PKC;
IBa, Ba2+ current;
DOG, 1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol;
DAG, diacylglycerol;
HAL, halothane;
ISO, isoflurane;
IP3, inositol-1,4,5-triphosphate;
HVGCC, high-voltage-gated calcium
channel.
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6167-6173
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J Neurosci
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