PMID: 6411714Sep 10, 1983Paper

The origin, quantitation, and kinetics of intracellular calcium mobilization by vasopressin and phenylephrine in hepatocytes.

The Journal of Biological Chemistry
S K Joseph, J R Williamson

Abstract

The addition of phenylephrine or vasopressin to isolated hepatocytes resulted in an efflux of calcium. The intracellular source of this calcium was determined by measuring the calcium released upon the sequential additions of an uncoupling agent and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 to control and hormone-treated cells. The release promoted by these agents was used as an estimate of the calcium content of the mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum, respectively. The validity and limitations of this method are critically evaluated. The source of the calcium mobilized by the hormones was found to depend on the intracellular calcium distribution. When the amount of total cell-releasable Ca2+ was low (less than 0.9 nmol/mg cell dry weight), the endoplasmic reticulum represented the major cellular calcium pool and was also the predominant pool mobilized by the hormone. As the cell calcium content was increased, the endoplasmic reticulum attained its maximum capacity and the mitochondria sequestered increasing amounts of calcium. Under these conditions, the hormones mobilized calcium from the mitochondria with minimal effects on the endoplasmic reticulum calcium pool. These results suggest that more than one hormone-induced Ca2+-releasing ag...Continue Reading

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