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  • Title: Basic FGF enhances calcium permeable channel openings in adult rat cardiac myocytes: implication in the bFGF-induced increase of free Ca2+ content.
    Author: Merle PL, Usson Y, Robert-Nicoud M, Verdetti J.
    Journal: J Mol Cell Cardiol; 1997 Oct; 29(10):2687-98. PubMed ID: 9344763.
    Abstract:
    Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) has been implicated in the changes in gene expression that, under pathological conditions such as ischemia or volume overload, lead to adult cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. In many tissues, one of the first events following cell activation by growth factors is an enhancement of the intracellular free calcium concentration, generated by fluxes from internal storage compartments and through channels of the plasma membrane. The present study was undertaken to determine whether cardiac myocytes isolated from adult rat ventricles express Ca2+-permeable channels activated by bFGF. Using the cell-attached mode of the patch-clamp technique, we observed that bFGF (from 0.1-10 nM) induced an increase of fast burst openings, mediated by Ca2+-permeable channels with low conductance (15 pS) and voltage-independence. Inside-out patch-clamp experiments revealed that inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (5 microM) enhanced the opening of Ca2+-permeable channels with similar properties as the bFGF-induced channels, indicating that IP3 may be a second messenger of this process. Confocal fluorescence imaging of intracellular free calcium provided direct evidence that bFGF induced an increase of cytoplasmic and nucleoplasmic free Ca2+ concentrations which were generated, in part, by Ca2+ influx through the plasma membrane. In conclusion, this study supports the presence, in the plasma membrane of adult cardiac myocytes, of messenger-activated calcium channels which could play key roles in the calcium-dependent pathways that are activated in response to growth factors.
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