Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
Abstract
The role of mitochondria in Ca2+ homeostasis is controversial. We employed the Ca2+-sensitive dye rhod 2 with novel, high temporal and spatial resolution imaging to evaluate changes in the matrix free Ca2+ concentration of individual mitochondria ([Ca2+]m) in agonist-stimulated, primary cultured aortic myocytes. Stimulation with 10 μM serotonin (5-HT) evoked modest cytosolic Ca2+ transients [cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]cyt) <500 nM; measured with fura 2] and triggered contractions in short-term cultured myocytes. However, 5-HT triggered a large mitochondrial rhod 2 signal (indicating pronounced elevation of [Ca2+]m) in only 4% of cells. This revealed heterogeneity in the responses of individual mitochondria, all of which stained with MitoTracker Green FM. In contrast, stimulation with 100 μM ATP evoked large cytosolic Ca2+ transients (>1,000 nM) and induced pronounced, reversible elevation of [Ca2+]m(measured as rhod 2 fluorescence) in 60% of cells. This mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake usually lagged behind the cytosolic Ca2+ transient peak by 3–5 s, and [Ca2+]mdeclined more slowly than did bulk [Ca2+]cyt. The uptake delay may prevent mitochondria from interfering with rapid signaling events while enhancing the mitochondrial response to large, long-duration elevations of [Ca2+]cyt. The responses of arterial myocytes to modest physiological stimulation do not, however, depend on such marked changes in [Ca2+]m.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
66 articles.
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