Literature DB >> 10070177

Calcium handling in airway smooth muscle: mechanisms and therapeutic implications.

L J Janssen1.   

Abstract

Calcium plays a central role in the activation of many cellular processes, including the most relevant end-point in airway smooth muscle physiology: contraction. For this reason, the cytosolic concentration of calcium is tightly controlled by an elaborate array of mechanisms. The latter include multiple entry pathways from the extracellular space, a pump on the membrane that extrudes calcium out of the cell, an internal pump that sequesters calcium into an intracellular pool and at least two types of release sites from which sequestered calcium can be released back into the cytosol; all of these mechanisms are tightly regulated by second messenger-signalling pathways. Understanding of the relationship between calcium handling and contraction ('excitation-contraction coupling') has progressed from a mechanism in which activation of voltage-dependent calcium channels plays a central role (as in skeletal muscle) to a mechanism in which a small localized signalling event triggers a massive release of internal calcium (as in cardiac muscle) to a more complicated model in which the internal calcium pool divides the cytosol into two physiologically distinct spaces where the cytosolic concentration of calcium is regulated independently (as in vascular smooth muscle). The changes that may occur in calcium-handling pathways in asthma and the opportunities for novel approaches to the treatment of asthma are also discussed.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 10070177     DOI: 10.1155/1998/678027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can Respir J        ISSN: 1198-2241            Impact factor:   2.409


  3 in total

Review 1.  Brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the airways.

Authors:  Y S Prakash; Richard J Martin
Journal:  Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 12.310

2.  Reciprocal Correlations of Inflammatory and Calcium Signaling in Asthma Pathogenesis.

Authors:  Ryan Okonski; Yun-Min Zheng; Annarita Di Mise; Yong-Xiao Wang
Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol       Date:  2021       Impact factor: 2.622

3.  Voltage effects on muscarinic acetylcholine receptor-mediated contractions of airway smooth muscle.

Authors:  Iurii Semenov; Robert Brenner
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2018-09
  3 in total

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