4.5 Article

Potentiation of a sodium-calcium exchanger in the nuclear envelope by nuclear GM1 ganglioside

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue 6, Pages 1185-1195

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2002.00917.x

Keywords

gangliosides; GM1 ganglioside; NG108-15 cell line; nuclear calcium; nuclear envelope; sodium-calcium exchanger

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [NS33912] Funding Source: Medline

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Calcium is recognized as an important intracellular messenger with a pivotal role in the regulation of many cytosolic and nuclear processes. Gangliosides of various types, especially GM1, are known to have a role in some aspects of Ca2+ regulation, operating through a variety of mechanisms that are gradually coming to light. The present study provides evidence for a sodium-calcium exchanger in the nuclear envelope of NG108-15 neuroblastoma cells that is potently and specifically activated by GM1. Immunoblot analysis revealed an unusually tight association of GM1 with the exchanger in the nuclear envelope but not with that in the plasma membrane. Exchanger and associated GM1 were located in the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope, suggesting this system could function to transfer Ca2+ between nucleoplasm and the envelope lumen. The GM1-enhanced exchange was blocked by cholera toxin B subunit while C2-ceramide, a recently discovered inhibitor of the exchanger, blocked all transfer. Exchanger activity was significantly elevated in nuclei isolated from cells that were induced to differentiate by KCl + dibutyryl-cAMP, a treatment previously shown to promote up-regulation of nuclear GM1 in conjunction with axonogenesis. Similar enhancement was achieved by addition of exogenous GM1 to nuclei from undifferentiated cells. These results suggest a prominent role for nuclear GM1 in regulation of nuclear Ca2+ homeostasis.

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