Possible role for mitochondrial calcium in angiotensin II- and potassium-stimulated steroidogenesis in bovine adrenal glomerulosa cells

Endocrinology
Y BrandenburgerA M Capponi

Abstract

In adrenal zona glomerulosa cells, the action of angiotensin II (Ang II) and of potassium (K+) on aldosterone synthesis is mediated by the Ca2+ messenger system. The major part of the steroidogenic pathway takes place inside the mitochondria, and Ca2+ must enter the mitochondrial matrix to stimulate the steroidogenic cascade. To examine how changes in the cytosolic free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]c) induced by Ang II and K+ are relayed into the mitochondrial matrix, we transfected bovine adrenal zona glomerulosa cells in primary culture with a chimeric complementary DNA encoding for the signal presequence targeting human cytochrome c oxidase subunit VIII to the matrix, linked to a complementary DNA coding for the Ca2+-sensitive photoprotein aequorin. Resting mitochondrial free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]m) amounted to 0.41 +/- 0.18 microM (n = 40). Ang II induced a concentration-dependent (EC50 = 11.3 +/- 6.0 nM), biphasic rise of [Ca2+]m. After a large transient initial peak (5.13 +/- 0.89 microM, n = 28), [Ca2+]m decreased to a plateau that remained higher than basal [Ca2+]m for several minutes in the presence of the hormone. By contrast, studies in cells transfected with cytosolic aequorin indicated that the rise of [Ca2...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 24, 2012·The Journal of Biological Chemistry·Raz PaltyIsrael Sekler
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