These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Distinction between Ca(2+) pump and Ca(2+)/H(+) antiport activities in synaptic vesicles of sheep brain cortex.
    Author: Gonçalves PP, Meireles SM, Neves P, Vale MG.
    Journal: Neurochem Int; 2000 Oct; 37(4):387-96. PubMed ID: 10825579.
    Abstract:
    Synaptic vesicles, isolated from a sheep brain cortex, accumulate Ca(2+) in a manner that depends on the pH and pCa values. In the presence of 100 microM CaCl(2), most of the Ca(2+) taken up by the vesicles was vanadate-inhibited (86%) at pH 7.4, whereas at pH 8.5, part of the Ca(2+) accumulated (36%) was DeltapH-dependent (bafilomycin and CCCP inhibited) and part was insensitive to those drugs (31%). We also observed that both vanadate-sensitive and bafilomycin-sensitive Ca(2+) accumulations were completely released by the Ca(2+) ionophore, ionomycin, and that these processes work with high (K(0.5)=0.6 microM) and low (K(0.5)=217 microM) affinity for Ca(2+), respectively. The DeltapH-dependent Ca(2+) transport appears to be largely operative at Ca(2+) concentrations (>100 microM) which completely inhibited the vanadate-sensitive Ca(2+) uptake. These Ca(2+) effects on the Ca(2+) accumulation were well correlated with those observed on the vanadate-inhibited Ca(2+)-ATPase and bafilomycin-inhibited H(+)-ATPase, respectively. The Ca(2+)-ATPase activity reached a maximum at about 25 microM (pH 7.4) and sharply declined at higher Ca(2+) concentrations. In contrast, Ca(2+) had a significant stimulatory effect on the H(+)-ATPase between 250 and 500 microM Ca(2+) concentration. Furthermore, we found that DeltapH-sensitive Ca(2+) transport was associated with proton release from the vesicles. About 21% of the maximal proton gradient was dissipated by addition of 607.7 microM CaCl(2) to the reaction medium and, if CaCl(2) was present before the proton accumulation, lower pH gradients were reached. Both vanadate-inhibited and bafilomycin-inhibited systems transported Ca(2+) into the same vesicle pool of our preparation, suggesting that they belong to the same cellular compartment. These results indicate that synaptic vesicles of the sheep brain cortex contain two distinct mechanisms of Ca(2+) transport: a high Ca(2+) affinity, proton gradient-independent Ca(2+) pump that has an optimal activity at pH 7.4, and a low Ca(2+) affinity, proton gradient-dependent Ca(2+)/H(+) antiport that works maximally at pH 8.5.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]