To characterize the role of the calcium entry pathway in
agonist-induced HLECs, calcium-signaling protocols based on the
depletion of intracellular calcium stores were used. In the first
instance, the characteristics of the calcium influx pathway associated
with biphasic sustained calcium responses induced by maximal
concentrations of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or histamine were
compared with calcium entry invoked by thapsigargin, the
sarco–endoplasmic reticulum Ca–ATPase (SERCA) pump
inhibitor.
26 Figure 1A illustrates the relative contributions from intracellular and
extracellular calcium to the formation of a maximal response induced by
ATP. The more transient of the two superimposed responses was conducted
in the absence of calcium from the bathing medium. Initially, the two
responses were directly comparable, which indicates that the first
phase of the response was due to the release of calcium from
intracellular stores. After 82 ± 16 seconds (
n = 4)
the two responses diverged, suggesting that at this point a very much
delayed calcium influx pathway is activated. Moreover, responses to
30-second pulses of histamine conducted in the presence or absence of
calcium from the bathing medium were found to be superimposable (see
Riach et al.
5 ). To verify the time course and extent of
the delayed calcium influx component, manganese entry was used as a
surrogate of calcium influx.
22 23 24 25 Addition of manganese
(100 μM) to the control (1 mM Ca
2+)
extracellular medium induced a basal quench of the calcium-insensitive
357-nm fluorescence, indicating that there was a leak of manganese into
the cytosol in the resting condition
(Fig. 1B) . Stimulation of HLECs
with high concentrations of ATP elicited a maintained response that was
depicted in an inverted fashion by the calcium-sensitive 375-nm
fluorescence intensity
(Fig. 1B) . The validity of the chosen isosbestic
point was confirmed by the absence of deviation of the 357-nm
fluorescence intensity coincident with the onset of the calcium
response registered by the 375-nm trace. There was no immediate
increase in the manganese quench after formation of the calcium
response, indicating that the degree of calcium entry remained inactive
during the initiation of the ATP-induced calcium signal. Rather, there
was a delay of 60 ± 16 seconds (
n = 4) after the onset
of the calcium response and an observed increase in manganese quench
rate. This latency is not significantly different (
P <
0.01) from the time taken for nonoscillatory superimposed ATP responses
to deviate when the agonist was applied in the presence and absence of
extracellular calcium
(Fig. 1A) . Lines of best fit applied to the rates
before and after the agonist-induced increase in manganese quench
indicate that the quench rate was stimulated 2.9 ± 0.3-fold
(
n = 4).