Shapiro_1996_J.Neurophysiol_76_311

Reference

Title : Selective disruption by protein kinases of G-protein-mediated Ca2+ channel modulation - Shapiro_1996_J.Neurophysiol_76_311
Author(s) : Shapiro MS , Zhou J , Hille B
Ref : Journal of Neurophysiology , 76 :311 , 1996
Abstract :

1. We studied the effects of phorbol-12-myristate, 13-acetate (PMA) on G-protein-mediated inhibition of Ca2+ channels by several neurotransmitters in rat superior cervical ganglion (SCG) sympathetic neurons, with the use of the whole cell patch clamp. PMA attenuated membrane-delimited inhibition of calcium currents (ICa) by norepinephrine (NE) and somatostatin by more than half, but did not attenuate inhibition by M1 muscarinic receptors, which use a diffusible cytoplasmic messenger. Inhibition of ICa by NE through pertussis-toxin-sensitive and -insensitive G proteins was equally attenuated by PMA. PMA enhanced ICa in about half the neurons (enhancement of 10 +/- 1%, mean +/- SE) and strongly reduced the holding current in 44 of 61 cells. 2. The M-type K+ current (IM) was not suppressed by PMA, and PMA did not attenuate inhibition of IM by muscarinic agonists, which is also via a diffusible cytoplasmic messenger. 3. Attenuation of NE and somatostatin inhibition by PMA was blocked by 1 microM staurosporine, a broad-spectrum protein kinase inhibitor. Tests with three inhibitors selective for distinct isoforms of protein kinase C (PKC) gave mixed results. PMA's actions were unaffected by 1 microM calphostin C, blocked by 500 nM bisindolylmaleimide, and unaffected by the pseudosubstrate inhibitor PKC19-36. 4. Thus we find that two membrane-delimited signaling pathways that inhibit ion channels in rat SCG neurons are strongly attenuated by PMA, but signaling pathway(s) that use a diffusible cytoplasmic messenger are not. We speculate that a nonstandard PKC isoform, perhaps PKC mu, mediates PMA actions.

PubMedSearch : Shapiro_1996_J.Neurophysiol_76_311
PubMedID: 8836227

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Citations formats

Shapiro MS, Zhou J, Hille B (1996)
Selective disruption by protein kinases of G-protein-mediated Ca2+ channel modulation
Journal of Neurophysiology 76 :311

Shapiro MS, Zhou J, Hille B (1996)
Journal of Neurophysiology 76 :311