12 research outputs found
GABA\u3csub\u3eB\u3c/sub\u3e Receptors Couple to GĪ±\u3csub\u3eq\u3c/sub\u3e to Mediate Increases in Voltage-Dependent Calcium Current During Development
Metabotropic GABAB receptors are known to modulate the activity of voltage-dependent calcium channels. Previously, we have shown that GABAB receptors couple to a non-Gi/o G-protein to enhance calcium influx through L-type calcium channels by activating protein kinase C in neonatal rat hippocampal neurons. In this study, the components of this signaling pathway were investigated further. GĪ±q was knocked down using morpholino oligonucleotides prior to examining GABAB-mediated enhancement of calcium influx. When GĪ±q G-proteins were eliminated using morpholino-mediated knockdown, the enhancing effects of the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen (10 Ī¼M) on calcium current or entry were eliminated. These data suggest that GABAB receptors couple to GĪ±q to regulate calcium influx. Confocal imaging analysis illustrating colocalization of GABAB receptors with GĪ±q supports this hypothesis. Furthermore, baclofen treatment caused translocation of PKCĪ± (protein kinase C Ī±) but not PKCĪ² or PKCĪµ, suggesting that it is the Ī± isoform of PKC that mediates calcium current enhancement. Inhibition of calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II did not affect the baclofen-mediated enhancement of calcium levels. In summary, activation of GABAB receptors during development leads to increased calcium in a subset of neurons through GĪ±q signaling and PKCĪ± activation without the involvement of calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II
Involvement of Protein Kinase C and Protein Kinase A in the Enhancement of L-type Calcium Current by GABA\u3csub\u3eB\u3c/sub\u3e Receptor Activation in Neonatal Hippocampus
In the early neonatal period activation of GABAB receptors attenuates calcium current through N-type calcium channels while enhancing current through L-type calcium channels in rat hippocampal neurons. The attenuation of N-type calcium current has been previously demonstrated to occur through direct interactions of the Ī²Ī³ subunits of Gi/o G-proteins, but the signal transduction pathway for the enhancement of L-type calcium channels in mammalian neurons remains unknown. In the present study, calcium currents were elicited in acute cultures from postnatal day 6ā8 rat hippocampi in the presence of various modulators of protein kinase A (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC) pathways. Overnight treatment with an inhibitor of Gi/o (pertussis toxin, 200 ng/ml) abolished the attenuation of calcium current by the GABAB agonist, baclofen (10 Ī¼M) with no effect on the enhancement of calcium current. These data indicate that while the attenuation of N-type calcium current is mediated by the Gi/o subtype of G-protein, the enhancement of L-type calcium current requires activation of a different G-protein. The enhancement of the sustained component of calcium current by baclofen was blocked by PKC inhibitors, GF-109203X (500 nM), chelerythrine chloride (5 Ī¼M), and PKC fragment 19ā36 (2 Ī¼M) and mimicked by the PKC activator phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (1 Ī¼M). The enhancement of the sustained component of calcium current was blocked by PKA inhibitors H-89 (1 Ī¼M) and PKA fragment 6ā22 (500 nM) but not Rp-cAMPS (30 Ī¼M) and it was not mimicked by the PKA activator, 8-Br-cAMP (500 Ī¼Mā1 mM). The data suggest that activation of PKC alone is sufficient to enhance L-type calcium current but that PKA may also be involved in the GABAB receptor mediated effect
Nonspecific, Reversible Inhibition of Voltage-Gated Calcium Channels by CaMKII Inhibitor CK59
Investigation of kinase-related processes often uses pharmacological inhibition to reveal pathways in which kinases are involved. However, one concern about using such kinase inhibitors is their potential lack of specificity. Here, we report that the calciumācalmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII) inhibitor CK59 inhibited multiple voltage-gated calcium channels, including the L-type channel during depolarization in a dose-dependent manner. The use of another CaMKII inhibitor, cell-permeable autocamtide-2 related inhibitory peptide II (Ant-AIP-II), failed to similarly decrease calcium current or entry in hippocampal cultures, as shown by ratiometric calcium imaging and whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology. Notably, inhibition due to CK59 was reversible; washout of the drug brought calcium levels back to control values upon depolarization. Furthermore, the IC50 for CK59 was approximately 50 Ī¼M, which is only fivefold larger than the reported IC50 values for CaMKII inhibition. Similar nonspecific actions of other CaMKII inhibitors KN93 and KN62 have previously been reported. In the case of all three kinase inhibitors, the IC50 for calcium current inhibition falls near that of CaMKII inhibition. Our findings demonstrate that CK59 attenuates activity of voltage-gated calcium channels, and thus provide more evidence for caution when relying on pharmacological inhibition to examine kinase-dependent phenomena
Writing Assignments with a Metacognitive Component Enhance Learning in a Large Introductory Biology Course
Writing assignments, including note taking and written recall, should enhance retention of knowledge, whereas analytical writing tasks with metacognitive aspects should enhance higher-order thinking. In this study, we assessed how certain writing-intensive āinterventions,ā such as written exam corrections and peer-reviewed writing assignments using Calibrated Peer Review and including a metacognitive component, improve student learning. We designed and tested the possible benefits of these approaches using control and experimental variables across and between our three-section introductory biology course. Based on assessment, students who corrected exam questions showed significant improvement on postexam assessment compared with their nonparticipating peers. Differences were also observed between students participating in written and discussion-based exercises. Students with low ACT scores benefited equally from written and discussion-based exam corrections, whereas students with midrange to high ACT scores benefited more from written than discussion-based exam corrections. Students scored higher on topics learned via peer-reviewed writing assignments relative to learning in an active classroom discussion or traditional lecture. However, students with low ACT scores (17ā23) did not show the same benefit from peer-reviewed written essays as the other students. These changes offer significant student learning benefits with minimal additional effort by the instructors
Levels of Ca\u3csub\u3ev\u3c/sub\u3e1.2 L-Type Ca\u3csup\u3e2+\u3c/sup\u3e Channels Peak in the First Two Weeks in Rat Hippocampus Whereas Ca\u3csub\u3ev\u3c/sub\u3e1.3 Channels Steadily Increase through Development
Influx of calcium through voltage-dependent channels regulates processes throughout the nervous system. Specifically, influx through L-type channels plays a variety of roles in early neuronal development and is commonly modulated by G-protein-coupled receptors such as GABAB receptors. Of the four isoforms of L-type channels, only Cav1.2 and Cav1.3 are predominately expressed in the nervous system. Both isoforms are inhibited by the same pharmacological agents, so it has been difficult to determine the role of specific isoforms in physiological processes. In the present study, Western blot analysis and confocal microscopy were utilized to study developmental expression levels and patterns of Cav1.2 and Cav1.3 in the CA1 region of rat hippocampus. Steady-state expression of Cav1.2 predominated during the early neonatal period decreasing by day 12. Steady-state expression of Cav1.3 was low at birth and gradually rose to adult levels by postnatal day 15. In immunohistochemical studies, antibodies against Cav1.2 and Cav1.3 demonstrated the highest intensity of labeling in the proximal dendrites at all ages studied (P1ā72). Immunohistochemical studies on one-week-old hippocampi demonstrated significantly more colocalization of GABAB receptors with Cav1.2 than with Cav1.3, suggesting that modulation of L-type calcium current in early development is mediated through Cav1.2 channels
H\u3csup\u3e+\u3c/sup\u3e- and Na\u3csup\u3e+\u3c/sup\u3e- elicited rapid changes of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the biflagellated green alga \u3cem\u3eChlamydomonas\u3c/em\u3e
Although microtubules are known for dynamic instability, the dynamicity is considered to be tightly controlled to support a variety of cellular processes. Yet diverse evidence suggests that this is not applicable to Chlamydomonas, a biflagellate fresh water green alga, but intense autofluorescence from photosynthesis pigments has hindered the investigation. By expressing a bright fluorescent reporter protein at the endogenous level, we demonstrate in real time discreet sweeping changes in algal microtubules elicited by rises of intracellular H+ and Na+. These results from this model organism with characteristics of animal and plant cells provide novel explanations regarding how pH may drive cellular processes; how plants may respond to, and perhaps sense stresses; and how organisms with a similar sensitive cytoskeleton may be susceptible to environmental changes
BK Potassium Currents Contribute Differently to Action Potential Waveform and Firing Rate as Rat Hippocampal Neurons Mature in The First Postnatal Week
The large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channel is a critical regulator of neuronal action potential firing and follows two distinct trends in early postnatal development: an increase in total expression and a shift from the faster activating STREX isoform to the slower ZERO isoform. We analyzed the functional consequences of developmental trends in BK channel expression in hippocampal neurons isolated from neonatal rats aged 1 to 7 days. Following overnight cultures, action potentials and currents were recorded using whole cell patch-clamp electrophysiology. These neurons undergo a steady increase in excitability during this time, and the effect of blockade of BK channel activity with 100 nM iberiotoxin changes as the neurons mature. BK currents contribute significantly more to total potassium current and single action potentials in neurons of 1-day old rats (with BK blockade extending action potential duration by 0.46āĀ±ā0.12 ms) than in those of 7-day old rats (with BK blockade extending action potential duration by 0.17āĀ±ā0.05 ms). BK currents contribute consistently to maintain firing rates in neurons of 1-day old rats throughout extended action potential firing; BK blockade evenly depresses firing frequency across action potential trains. In neurons from 7-day old rats, BK blockade initially increases firing frequency and then progressively decreases frequency as firing continues, ultimately depressing neuronal firing rates to a greater extent than in the neurons from 1-day-old animals. These results are consistent with a transition from low expression of a fast-activating BK isoform (STREX) to high expression of a slower activating isoform (ZERO).
NEW & NOTEWORTHY This work describes the early developmental trends of large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channel activity. Early developmental trends in expression of BK channels, both total expression and relative isoform expression, have been previously reported, but little work describes the effect of these changes in expression patterns on excitability. Here, we show that early changes in BK channel expression patterns lead to changes in the role of BK channels in determining the action potential waveform and neuronal excitability
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Painful neuropathy decreases membrane calcium current in mammalian primary afferent neurons
Hyperexcitability of the primary afferent neuron leads to neuropathic pain following injury to peripheral axons. Changes in calcium channel function of sensory neurons following injury have not been directly examined at the channel level, even though calcium is a primary second messenger-regulating neuronal function. We compared calcium currents (
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Ca) in 101 acutely isolated dorsal root ganglion neurons from 31 rats with neuropathic pain following chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve, to cells from 25 rats with normal sensory function following sham surgery. Cells projecting to the sciatic nerve were identified with a fluorescent label applied at the CCI site. Membrane function was determined using patch-clamp techniques in current clamp mode, and in voltage-clamp mode using solutions and conditions designed to isolate
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Ca. Somata of peripheral sensory neurons from hyperalgesic rats demonstrated decreased
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Ca. Peak calcium channel current density was diminished by injury from 3.06Ā±0.30 pS/pF to 2.22Ā±0.26 pS/pF in medium neurons, and from 3.93Ā±0.38 pS/pF to 2.99Ā±0.40 pS/pF in large neurons. Under these voltage and pharmacologic conditions, medium-sized neuropathic cells lacked obvious T-type calcium currents which were present in 25% of medium-sized cells from control animals. Altered Ca
2+ signalling in injured sensory neurons may contribute to hyperexcitability leading to neuropathic pain