An extracellular calcium (Ca 2ฯฉ o )-sensing receptor (CaR) plays crucial roles in maintaining systemic calcium homeostasis. The CaR is also expressed in other cells uninvolved in systemic mineral ion homeostasis, including keratinocytes, fibroblasts, and neurons. In brain the CaR is widely distribut
Lack of direct evidence for a functional role of voltage-operated calcium channels in juxtaglomerular cells
โ Scribed by Armin Kurtz; Ole Skott; Soheil Chegini; Reinhold Penner
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 726 KB
- Volume
- 416
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0031-6768
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โฆ Synopsis
In this study we have examined the role of voltage-gated calcium channels in the regulation of calcium in juxtaglomerular cells. Using a combination of patch-clamp and single-cell calcium measurement we obtained evidence neither for voltage-operated calcium currents nor for changes of the intracellular calcium concentration upon acute depolarizations of the cell membrane. Increases of the extracellular concentration of potassium to 80 mmol/l depolarized the juxtaglomerular cells close to the potassium equilibrium potential, but did not alter the intracellular calcium concentration neither in patch-clamped nor in intact Furaester-loaded cells. Moreover, basal renin secretion from a preparation enriched in mouse juxtaglomerular cells and from rat glomeruli with attached juxtaglomerular cells was not inhibited when extracellular potassium was isoosmotically increased to 56 mmol/l. In mouse kidney slices, however, depolarizing potassium concentrations caused a delayed inhibition at 56 mmol/l and a delayed stimulation of renin secretion at 110 mmol/l. Taken together, our study does not provide direct evidence for a role of voltage-activated calcium channels in the regulation of calcium and renin secretion in renal juxtaglomerular cells.
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