Physiological effects of Na+/Ca2+exchanger knockdown by antisense oligodeoxynucleotides in arterial myocytes

Author:

Slodzinski Martin K.12,Blaustein Mordecai P.132

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Physiology and

2. Center for Vascular Biology and Hypertension, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201

3. Medicine and the

Abstract

Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (AS-oligos) targeted to the Na+/Ca2+exchanger (NCX) inhibit NCX-mediated Ca2+ influx in mesenteric artery (MA) myocytes [ Am. J. Physiol.269 ( Cell Physiol. 38): C1340–C1345, 1995]. Here, we show AS-oligo knockdown of NCX-mediated Ca2+ efflux. In initial experiments, the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]cyt) was raised, and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ sequestration was blocked with caffeine and cyclopiazonic acid; the extracellular Na+-dependent (NCX) component of Ca2+ efflux was then selectively inhibited in AS-oligo-treated cells but not in controls (no oligos or nonsense oligos). In contrast, the La3+-sensitive (plasmalemma Ca2+ pump) component of Ca2+ efflux was unaffected in AS-oligo-treated cells. Knockdown of NCX activity was reversed by incubating AS-oligo-treated cells in normal media for 5 days. Transient [Ca2+]cytelevations evoked by serotonin (5-HT) at 15-min intervals in AS-oligo-treated cells were indistinguishable from those in controls. When cells were stimulated every 3 min, however, the peak amplitudes of the second and third responses were larger, and [Ca2+]cytreturned to baseline more slowly, in AS-oligo-treated cells than in controls. Peak 5-HT-evoked responses in the controls, but not AS-oligo-treated cells, were augmented more than twofold in Na+-free media. This implies that NCX is involved in Na+ gradient modulation of SR Ca2+ stores and cell responsiveness. The repetitive stimulation data suggest that the NCX may be important during tonic activation of arterial myocytes.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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