Calcium‐pH crosstalks in rat mast cells: cytosolic alkalinization, but not intracellular calcium release, is a sufficient signal for degranulation

A Alfonso, AG Cabado, MR Vieytes… - British journal of …, 2000 - Wiley Online Library
A Alfonso, AG Cabado, MR Vieytes, LM Botana
British journal of pharmacology, 2000Wiley Online Library
The aim of this work was to study the relationship between intracellular alkalinization,
calcium fluxes and histamine release in rat mast cells. Intracellular alkalinization was
induced by nigericin, a monovalent cation ionophore, and by NH4Cl (ammonium chloride).
Calcium cytosolic and intracellular pH were measured by fluorescence digital imaging using
Fura‐2‐AM and BCECF‐AM. In rat mast cells, nigericin and NH4Cl induce a dose‐
dependent intracellular alkalinization, a dose‐dependent increase in intracellular calcium …
  • The aim of this work was to study the relationship between intracellular alkalinization, calcium fluxes and histamine release in rat mast cells. Intracellular alkalinization was induced by nigericin, a monovalent cation ionophore, and by NH4Cl (ammonium chloride). Calcium cytosolic and intracellular pH were measured by fluorescence digital imaging using Fura‐2‐AM and BCECF‐AM.
  • In rat mast cells, nigericin and NH4Cl induce a dose‐dependent intracellular alkalinization, a dose‐dependent increase in intracellular calcium levels by releasing calcium from intracellular pools, and an activation of capacitative calcium influx.
  • The increase in both intracellular calcium and pH activates exocytosis (histamine release) in the absence of external calcium. Under the same conditions, thapsigargin does not activate exocytosis, the main difference being that thapsigargin does not alkalinize the cytosol.
  • After alkalinization, histamine release is intracellular‐calcium dependent. With 2.5 mM EGTA and thapsigargin the cell response decreases by 62%.
  • The cytosolic alkalinization, in addition to the calcium increase it is enough signal to elicit the exocytotic process in rat mast cells.
British Journal of Pharmacology (2000) 130, 1809–1816; doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0703490
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