cGMP-mediated Ca2+ release from IP3-insensitive Ca2+ stores in smooth muscle

Author:

Murthy Karnam S.1,Makhlouf Gabriel M.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Medicine and Physiology, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0711

Abstract

Recent studies on the role of nitric oxide (NO) in gastrointestinal smooth muscle have raised the possibility that NO-stimulated cGMP could, in the absence of cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) activity, act as a Ca2+-mobilizing messenger [K. S. Murthy, K.-M. Zhang, J.-G. Jin, J. T. Grider, and G. M. Makhlouf. Am. J. Physiol. 265 ( Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 28): G660–G671, 1993]. This notion was examined in dispersed gastric smooth muscle cells with 8-bromo-cGMP (8-BrcGMP) and with NO and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), which stimulate endogenous cGMP. In muscle cells treated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and PKG inhibitors (H-89 and KT-5823), 8-BrcGMP (10 μM), NO (1 μM), and VIP (1 μM) stimulated45Ca2+release (21 ± 3 to 30 ± 1% decrease in45Ca2+cell content); Ca2+ release stimulated by 8-BrcGMP was concentration dependent with an EC50 of 0.4 ± 0.1 μM and a threshold of 10 nM. 8-BrcGMP and NO increased cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) and induced contraction; both responses were abolished after Ca2+ stores were depleted with thapsigargin. With VIP, which normally increases [Ca2+]iby stimulating Ca2+ influx, treatment with PKA and PKG inhibitors caused a further increase in [Ca2+]ithat reverted to control levels in cells pretreated with thapsigargin. Neither Ca2+ release nor contraction induced by cGMP and NO in permeabilized muscle cells was affected by heparin or ruthenium red. Ca2+ release induced by maximally effective concentrations of cGMP and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) was additive, independent of which agent was applied first. We conclude that, in the absence of PKA and PKG activity, cGMP stimulates Ca2+ release from an IP3-insensitive store and that its effect is additive to that of IP3.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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