| Literature DB >> 25128575 |
Jason J Lefkowitz1, Valerie DeCrescenzo1, Kailai Duan1, Karl D Bellve2, Kevin E Fogarty2, John V Walsh3, Ronghua ZhuGe4.
Abstract
Adrenal chromaffin cells (ACCs), stimulated by the splanchnic nerve, generate action potentials (APs) at a frequency near 0.5 Hz in the resting physiological state, at times described as 'rest and digest'. How such low frequency stimulation in turn elicits sufficient catecholamine exocytosis to set basal sympathetic tone is not readily explained by the classical mechanism of stimulus-secretion coupling, where exocytosis is synchronized to AP-induced Ca(2+) influx. By using simulated action potentials (sAPs) at 0.5 Hz in isolated patch-clamped mouse ACCs, we show here that less than 10% of all catecholaminergic exocytosis, measured by carbon fibre amperometry, is synchronized to an AP. The asynchronous phase, the dominant phase, of exocytosis does not require Ca(2+) influx. Furthermore, increased asynchronous exocytosis is accompanied by an AP-dependent decrease in frequency of Ca(2+) syntillas (i.e. transient, focal Ca(2+) release from internal stores) and is ryanodine sensitive. We propose a mechanism of disinhibition, wherein APs suppress Ca(2+) syntillas, which themselves inhibit exocytosis as they do in the case of spontaneous catecholaminergic exocytosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25128575 PMCID: PMC4253468 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2014.278127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol ISSN: 0022-3751 Impact factor: 5.182