4.3 Article

A novel barium-sensitive calcium influx into rat astrocytes at low external potassium

Journal

CELL CALCIUM
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 247-259

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1054/ceca.2000.0153

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Cultured rat cerebellar astrocytes, loaded with the Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent dyes Fura-2 or Fluo-3, responded with cytoplasmic Ca2+ transients, when the external K+ concentration was reduced from 5 mM to below 1 mM. Ca2+ transients were generated after changing to a saline containing 0.2 mM K+ in 82% of the cells (n=303) with a delay of up to 4 min. Cultured rat cortical neurones, which responded in high-K+ saline (50 mM) with Ca2+ transients, showed no Ca2+ responses in low K+ (n=22). In acute rat hippocampal brain slices, presumed glial cells responded with Ca2+ transients in low K+ similar to astrocytes in culture (88%, n=17). The Ca2+ transients were observed both in somatic and dendritic regions of cultured astrocytes, as examined with confocal laser scanning microscopy. Patch-clamped astrocytes hyperpolarized in 0.2 mM K+ from an average resting potential of -65 +/-4 mV to -98 +/-20 mV (n=15). The Ca2+ transients in low K+ were suppressed in Ca2+-free saline, buffered with 0.5 mM EGTA, but not after depletion of intracellular Ca2+ stores by thapsigargin, cyclopiazonic acid or by Ruthenium Red, indicating that they were due to Ca2+ influx into the cells, and not caused by intracellular Ca2+ release. The addition of different divalent cations revealed that Ba2+, but not Ni2+, Cd2+, Sr2+ or Mg2+, reversibly blocked the Ca2+ transients in low K+. There was a significant reduction of the Ca2+ responses at micromolar Ba2+ concentrations (K-i = 3.8 muM). The application of different K+ channel blockers, tetraethylammonium, dequalinium, tolbutamide, clotrimazole, or quinidine had no effect on the Ca2+ responses. Removal of external Na+, or intracellular acidification by the addition of 40 mM propionate to the saline, had also no influence on the generation of the Ca2+ transients. The results suggest that reducing the external K+ concentration elicits a Ca2+ influx into rat astrocytes which is highly sensitive to Ba2+. It is discussed that this Ca2+ influx might occur through K+ inward rectifier channels, which become Ca2+-permeable when the extracellular K+ concentration decreases to 1 mM or below. (C) 2000 Harcourt Publishers Ltd.

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