4.7 Article

Cell swelling-induced ATP release and gadolinium-sensitive channels

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 282, Issue 1, Pages C219-C226

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00317.2001

Keywords

mechanosensitive adenosine 5-triphosphate release; luciferase bioluminescence

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ATP release induced by hypotonic swelling is an ubiquitous phenomenon in eukaryotic cells, but its underlying mechanisms are poorly defined. A mechanosensitive (MS) ATP channel has been implicated because gadolinium (Gd3+), an inhibitor of stretch-activated channels, suppressed ATP efflux monitored by luciferase bioluminescence. We examined the effect of Gd3+ on luciferase bioluminescence and on ATP efflux from hypotonically swollen cells. We found that luciferase was inhibited by less than or equal to 10 muM Gd3+, and this may have contributed to the previously reported inhibition of ATP release. In ATP efflux experiments, luciferase inhibition could be prevented by chelating Gd3+ with EGTA before luminometric ATP determinations. Using this approach, we found that 10-100 muM Gd3+, i.e., concentrations typically used to block MS channels, actually stimulated hypotonically induced ATP release from fibroblasts. Inhibition of ATP release required at least 500, 200, or 100 muM Gd3+ for fibroblasts, A549 cells, and 16HBE14o(-) cells, respectively. Such biphasic and cell-specific effects of Gd3+ are most consistent with its action on membrane lipids and membrane-dependent processes such as exocytosis.

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