82 research outputs found

    ATP release during cell swelling activates a Ca2+-dependent Cl - Current by autocrine mechanism in mouse hippocampal microglia

    Get PDF
    Microglia cells, resident immune cells of the brain, survey brain parenchyma by dynamically extending and retracting their processes. Cl- channels, activated in the cellular response to stretch/swelling, take part in several functions deeply connected with microglia physiology, including cell shape changes, proliferation, differentiation and migration. However, the molecular identity and functional properties of these Cl- channels are largely unknown. We investigated the properties of swelling-activated currents in microglial from acute hippocampal slices of Cx3cr1+/GFP mice by whole-cell patch-clamp and imaging techniques. The exposure of cells to a mild hypotonic medium, caused an outward rectifying current, developing in 5-10 minutes and reverting upon stimulus washout. This current, required for microglia ability to extend processes towards a damage signal, was carried mainly by Cl- ions and dependent on intracellular Ca2+. Moreover, it involved swelling-induced ATP release. We identified a purine-dependent mechanism, likely constituting an amplification pathway of current activation: under hypotonic conditions, ATP release triggered the Ca2+-dependent activation of anionic channels by autocrine purine receptors stimulation. Our study on native microglia describes for the first time the functional properties of stretch/swelling-activated currents, representing a key element in microglia ability to monitor the brain parenchyma

    Cancer is a Preventable Disease that Requires Major Lifestyle Changes

    Get PDF
    This year, more than 1 million Americans and more than 10 million people worldwide are expected to be diagnosed with cancer, a disease commonly believed to be preventable. Only 5–10% of all cancer cases can be attributed to genetic defects, whereas the remaining 90–95% have their roots in the environment and lifestyle. The lifestyle factors include cigarette smoking, diet (fried foods, red meat), alcohol, sun exposure, environmental pollutants, infections, stress, obesity, and physical inactivity. The evidence indicates that of all cancer-related deaths, almost 25–30% are due to tobacco, as many as 30–35% are linked to diet, about 15–20% are due to infections, and the remaining percentage are due to other factors like radiation, stress, physical activity, environmental pollutants etc. Therefore, cancer prevention requires smoking cessation, increased ingestion of fruits and vegetables, moderate use of alcohol, caloric restriction, exercise, avoidance of direct exposure to sunlight, minimal meat consumption, use of whole grains, use of vaccinations, and regular check-ups. In this review, we present evidence that inflammation is the link between the agents/factors that cause cancer and the agents that prevent it. In addition, we provide evidence that cancer is a preventable disease that requires major lifestyle changes

    ATP release via anion channels

    Get PDF
    ATP serves not only as an energy source for all cell types but as an ‘extracellular messenger-for autocrine and paracrine signalling. It is released from the cell via several different purinergic signal efflux pathways. ATP and its Mg2+ and/or H+ salts exist in anionic forms at physiological pH and may exit cells via some anion channel if the pore physically permits this. In this review we survey experimental data providing evidence for and against the release of ATP through anion channels. CFTR has long been considered a probable pathway for ATP release in airway epithelium and other types of cells expressing this protein, although non-CFTR ATP currents have also been observed. Volume-sensitive outwardly rectifying (VSOR) chloride channels are found in virtually all cell types and can physically accommodate or even permeate ATP4- in certain experimental conditions. However, pharmacological studies are controversial and argue against the actual involvement of the VSOR channel in significant release of ATP. A large-conductance anion channel whose open probability exhibits a bell-shaped voltage dependence is also ubiquitously expressed and represents a putative pathway for ATP release. This channel, called a maxi-anion channel, has a wide nanoscopic pore suitable for nucleotide transport and possesses an ATP-binding site in the middle of the pore lumen to facilitate the passage of the nucleotide. The maxi-anion channel conducts ATP and displays a pharmacological profile similar to that of ATP release in response to osmotic, ischemic, hypoxic and salt stresses. The relation of some other channels and transporters to the regulated release of ATP is also discussed

    Asymmetric gramicidin channels: heterodimeric channels with a single F6Val1 residue.

    Get PDF
    Substitution of Val1 by 4,4,4,4',4',4'-F6Val in [Val1]gramicidin A ([Val1]gA) produces channels in which the effects of amino acid replacements on dimer stability and ion permeation are nonadditive. If only one Val1 (in a symmetric [Val1]gA channel) is substituted by F6Val, the resulting heterodimeric channels are destabilized relative to both homodimeric parent channels and the single-channel conductance of the heterodimeric channels is reduced relative to the parent channels (Russell, E. W. B., L. B. Weiss, F. I. Navetta, R. E. Koeppe II, and O. S. Andersen. 1986. Single-channel studies on linear gramicidins with altered amino acid side chains. Effects of altering the polarity of the side chain at position #1 in gramicidin A. Biophys. J. 49:673; Durkin, J. T., R. E. Koeppe II, and O. S. Andersen. 1990. Energetics of gramicidin hybrid channel formation as a test for structural equivalence. Side-chain substitutions in the native sequence. J. Mol. Biol. 211:221-234). To understand the basis for this destabilization, we have examined further the characteristics of [F6Val1]/[Xxx1]gA heterodimers, where Xxx = Gly, Val, and Ala. These heterodimeric channels show rapid current transitions between (at least) two current levels and display asymmetric i-V characteristics. The orientation of the heterodimers relative to the applied potential was determined by asymmetric addition of the gramicidin analogs, one to each side of a preformed bilayer. The current transitions are most clearly illustrated for [F6Val1]/[Gly1]gA heterodimers, which possess two finite and well defined current levels. Based on the existence of these two conductance states and the analysis of duration and interval distributions, we conclude that the transitions between the two current levels correspond to conformational transitions in "stable" heterodimers. In the case of [F6Val1]/[Val1]gA and [F6Val1]/[Ala1]gA heterodimers, the low-conductance state is indistinguishable from zero. The two (or more) conductance states presumably correspond to different orientations of the dipolar F6Val1 side chain. The distribution between the high- and the low-conductance states varies as a function of potential in [F6Val1]/[Gly1]gA channels. These characteristics cause the [F6Val1]/nonpolar (Val, Ala, Gly)gA hybrid channels to serve as a "simple" model for understanding gating transitions in membrane-spanning channels
    corecore