Literature DB >> 12154184

Long-term study of Ca(2+) homeostasis and of survival in collagenase-isolated muscle fibres from normal and mdx mice.

F De Backer1, C Vandebrouck, P Gailly, J M Gillis.   

Abstract

Skeletal muscles of the mdx mouse lack dystrophin offering the possibility to study the role of intracellular Ca(2+) ions in fibre degeneration. Flexor digitorum brevis muscles of 3-month-old mdx and normal mice were dissociated with collagenase; fibres were maintained in culture for 6 days (d0 to d5) and their survival was assessed. Cytosolic [Ca(2+)], passive Mn(2+) influx (indicative of Ca(2+) influx) and activity of mechanosensitive/voltage-independent Ca(2+) channels were studied over the same period. Survival of normal fibres declined steadily from d0 to d3, but an acceleration of fibre death occurred in mdx fibres from d1 to d2. This could be greatly reduced but not abolished by lowering external [Ca(2+)] 10-fold. In the d0-d5 period, both mdx and normal fibres showed transient increases of Mn(2+) influx and activity of the Ca(2+) channels; these peaked at d1 and disappeared by d3-d4. Increases were always significantly larger in mdx fibres. Altogether, over the 6 days, 130 paired measurements of [Ca(2+)](i) and Mn(2+) influx were made on 68 fibres from mdx and 62 fibres from normal mice. In 90 % of the fibres, [Ca(2+)](i) remained within the 25-85 nM limits while Mn(2+) influx varied more than 10-fold. The median for Mn(2+) influx was 45 % greater in fibres from mdx mice than in fibres from control C57 mice. However, there was no significant difference between [Ca(2+)](i) medians in fibres from normal and mdx mice. Addition of 25-75 nM of a Ca(2+) ionophore (4-bromo-A23187) to the medium did not affect the level of cytosolic [Ca(2+)] in both types of fibres, while markedly increasing the rate of Mn(2+) influx, as expected. Thus, Ca(2+) homeostasis was equally robust in mdx and normal fibres. The remaining 10 % of the fibres showed, at d1, high levels of Mn(2+) influx and/or elevated [Ca(2+)](i) above 100 nM. This did not affect survival of normal fibres but was probably responsible of the increased death rate in mdx fibres.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12154184      PMCID: PMC2290435          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.020487

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  25 in total

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Authors:  J M Gillis
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Authors:  P R Turner; P Y Fong; W F Denetclaw; R A Steinhardt
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