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Article Abstract

How Ca(2+) oscillations are generated and fine-tuned to yield versatile downstream responses remains to be elucidated. In hepatocytes, G protein-coupled receptor-linked Ca(2+) oscillations report signal strength via frequency, whereas Ca(2+) spike amplitude and wave velocity remain constant. IP3 uncaging also triggers oscillatory Ca(2+) release, but, in contrast to hormones, Ca(2+) spike amplitude, width, and wave velocity were dependent on [IP3] and were not perturbed by phospholipase C (PLC) inhibition. These data indicate that oscillations elicited by IP3 uncaging are driven by the biphasic regulation of the IP3 receptor by Ca(2+), and, unlike hormone-dependent responses, do not require PLC. Removal of extracellular Ca(2+) did not perturb Ca(2+) oscillations elicited by IP3 uncaging, indicating that reloading of endoplasmic reticulum stores via plasma membrane Ca(2+) influx does not entrain the signal. Activation and inhibition of PKC attenuated hormone-induced Ca(2+) oscillations but had no effect on Ca(2+) increases induced by uncaging IP3. Importantly, PKC activation and inhibition differentially affected Ca(2+) spike frequencies and kinetics. PKC activation amplifies negative feedback loops at the level of G protein-coupled receptor PLC activity and/or IP3 metabolism to attenuate IP3 levels and suppress the generation of Ca(2+) oscillations. Inhibition of PKC relieves negative feedback regulation of IP3 accumulation and, thereby, shifts Ca(2+) oscillations toward sustained responses or dramatically prolonged spikes. PKC down-regulation attenuates phenylephrine-induced Ca(2+) wave velocity, whereas responses to IP3 uncaging are enhanced. The ability to assess Ca(2+) responses in the absence of PLC activity indicates that IP3 receptor modulation by PKC regulates Ca(2+) release and wave velocity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4513112PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.657767DOI Listing

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