| Literature DB >> 10405158 |
S Gijsbers1, G P Mannaerts, B Himpens, P P Van Veldhoven.
Abstract
Calcium mobilization induced by phosphorylated sphingoid bases was analyzed in calf pulmonary artery endothelial cells by confocal microscopy. A sphingenine-1-phosphate (SeP) analogue, N-acetyl-sphingenine-1-phosphate (N-C2-SeP), exogenously added to these cells, caused a fast and transient intracellular rise in calcium and was as potent as SeP. A minimal concentration of 0.6 nM for N-C2-SeP versus 1 nM for SeP was determined. The N-C2-SeP-induced Ca2+-signaling, like the response to SeP, was due to a release from thapsigargin-sensitive, ryanodine-insensitive, intracellular Ca2+-stores and not to a Ca2+-influx. N-C2-SeP can be considered as a truncated ceramide-phosphate, a lipid already reported to be mitogenic (Gomez-Munoz, A., Duffy, P.A., Martin, A., O'Brien, L., Byun, H.S., Bittman, R. and Brindley, D.N. (1995) Mol. Pharmacol. 47, 833-839), an effect that might be secondary to Ca2+-mobilization.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10405158 DOI: 10.1016/s0014-5793(99)00735-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEBS Lett ISSN: 0014-5793 Impact factor: 4.124