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Original Article |
Address correspondence to Michael J. Sanderson, Department of Physiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655. Fax: (508) 856-5997; E-mail: michael.sanderson{at}umassmed.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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75-µm thick) that maintained the in situ organization of the airways and the contractility of the SMCs for at least 5 d. 10500 nM acetylcholine (ACH) induced a contraction of the airway lumen and a transient increase in [Ca2+]i in individual SMCs that subsequently declined to initiate multiple intracellular Ca2+ oscillations. These Ca2+ oscillations spread as Ca2+ waves through the SMCs at
48 µm/s. The magnitude of the airway contraction, the initial Ca2+ transient, and the frequency of the subsequent Ca2+ oscillations were all concentration-dependent. In a Ca2+-free solution, ACH induced a similar Ca2+ response, except that the Ca2+ oscillations ceased after 11.5 min. Incubation with thapsigargin, xestospongin, or ryanodine inhibited the ACH-induced Ca2+ signaling. A comparison of airway contraction with the ACH-induced Ca2+ response of the SMCs revealed that the onset of airway contraction correlated with the initial Ca2+ transient, and that sustained airway contraction correlated with the occurrence of the Ca2+ oscillations. Buffering intracellular Ca2+ with BAPTA prohibited Ca2+ signaling and airway contraction, indicating a Ca2+-dependent pathway. Cessation of the Ca2+ oscillations, induced by ACH-esterase, halothane, or the absence of extracellular Ca2+ resulted in a relaxation of the airway. The concentration dependence of the airway contraction matched the concentration dependence of the increased frequency of the Ca2+ oscillations. These results indicate that Ca2+ oscillations, induced by ACH in murine bronchial SMCs, are generated by Ca2+ release from the SR involving IP3- and ryanodine receptors, and are required to maintain airway contraction.
Key Words: asthma hyper-reactivity confocal microscopy Ca2+ oscillations frequency modulation
| INTRODUCTION |
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To address some of these problems, we have refined the experimental use of lung slices. Lung slices previously have been used to study a variety of lung responses including bronchial contractility (Dandurand et al., 1993
; Martin et al., 1996
, 2000a
,b
, 2001
; Salerno et al., 1996
; Minshall et al., 1997
; Duguet et al., 2000
), vascular responses (Held et al., 1999
), mucociliary function (Kurosawa et al., 1995
), and allergic responses mediated by inflammatory cells (Dandurand et al., 1994
; Wohlsen et al., 2001
). Although most studies used video microscopy to document changes in airway size, the thickness of the slices precluded the observation of single cells. For example, Placke and Fisher (1987)
and Dandurand et al. (1993)
cut slices by hand that were 1,0002,000-µm and 5001,000-µm thick, respectively. Although Martin et al. (1996)
reduced the slice thickness to
250 µm using a tissue slicer, these slices remained unsuitable for single cell studies. With the aid of a vibratome tissue slicer, we have further reduced the slice thickness to
75 µm and, using confocal microscopy, we were able to study individual cells in the lung slice.
Agonist-induced increases in [Ca2+]i frequently results in the stimulation of intracellular Ca2+ oscillations, and the idea arising from this correlation is that frequency-modulated Ca2+ signals regulate cellular activities (for reviews see Berridge et al., 2000
; Bootman et al., 2001
). In isolated tracheal SMCs, acetylcholine (ACH) has been found to induce an initial Ca2+ transient that was associated with an increase in SMC tension (Shieh et al., 1991
). In the continued presence of ACH, this transient Ca2+ increase appeared to be followed by a reduced, but sustained, plateau in [Ca2+]i that was sufficient for the maintenance of tension. Subsequent studies have revealed that the ACH-induced Ca2+ transient was actually followed by Ca2+ oscillations (Liu and Farley, 1996
; Sims et al., 1996
; Prakash et al., 1997
, 2000
; Sieck et al., 1997
). However, these studies were performed on isolated tracheal SMCs, and the relationship of these Ca2+ transients and Ca2+ oscillations to airway caliber was unknown. Therefore, the correlation of the Ca2+ signaling in bronchial SMCs to airway contraction was the primary aim of the present study.
Cellular mechanisms of agonist-induced Ca2+ signaling in SMCs involve G-protein mediated activation of PLC, which hydrolyses phosphatidylinositol 4,5 bisphosphate to form diacylglycerol and inositol 1,4,5 trisphosphate (IP3). IP3 binds to specific receptors (IP3R) within the SR and releases Ca2+ from the SR (for review see Bootman et al., 2001
). However, the contribution of CICR from the SR via RYR and Ca2+ influx across the cell membrane varies among SMCs with respect to cell type and species (Savineau and Marthan, 2000
). Therefore, the present study is also focused on the mechanisms involved in ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillations in murine SMCs of airways distal to the trachea.
In this study, we present a unique system using thin lung slices and confocal microscopy to study both the cellular Ca2+ signaling events in airway SMCs and the impact that this has on airway contraction. From our data, we suggest that ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillations in airway SMCs are generated by Ca2+ release from the SR involving IP3R and RYR and that these Ca2+ oscillations are responsible for sustained SMC contraction and the associated reduced airway caliber. We also hypothesize that the magnitude of the sustained contraction may be regulated by the frequency of the Ca2+ oscillations.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Lung Slices
To cut thin lung slices, it was first necessary to stiffen and stabilize the soft lung tissue. This was achieved by inflating the lungs with liquid agarose that was subsequently induced to gel by reducing the temperature. A solution of 4% agarose (type VII-A: low gelling temperature) in distilled water was prepared at 60°C, cooled to 37°C, and mixed with 2x concentrated sHBSS with phenol red to give a 2% agarose-sHBSS solution at 37°C. Male BALB/C inbred strain mice (4277 d old; Charles River Breeding Labs) were killed by intraperitoneal injection (12 ml/kg bodyweight Nembutal). The fur was rinsed with ethanol and the trachea was exposed. Sternotomy was performed and the chest wall was removed. Care was taken not to injure the lungs. To fill the lungs with agarose, the trachea was cannulated using an intravenous catheter system (model 20G Intima; Becton Dickinson). The inner needle was removed and the outer intravenous tube was secured with suture thread (Dexon II, 40; Davis and Geck). To allow the air trapped in the intravenous tube to escape, the tube was initially clamped next to the trachea and an unattached 20-gauge needle was inserted into the tube, distal to the clamp. Once the tube was filled with agarose-sHBSS using a syringe, the clamp was removed and the lungs were slowly inflated with agarose-sHBSS (
1 ml). To prevent premature gelling of the agarose, the mouse and associated equipment were kept warm with a heat lamp. Subsequently, 0.10.2 ml of air was injected to flush the agarose-sHBSS out of the airways. The intravenous tube was clamped again to prevent leakage. The lungs were rinsed with 4°C sHBSS and the mouse was placed at 4°C for 15 min. The lungs were removed, placed in 4°C sHBSS, and cooled for an additional 15 min to ensure the complete gelling of the agarose within the lungs. After isolating single lung lobes, slices of
75-µm thickness were cut at 4°C in sHBSS with a tissue slicer (model EMS-4000; Electron Microscopy Sciences). Up to eight slices were placed in one petri dish and cultured by floating them in 2 ml of DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS and antibiotics and antimycotics at 37°C in 10% CO2. The actual slice thickness was measured using a position servo controller (model LVPZT E-662; Physik Instrumente) mounted on a confocal microscope.
Immunohistochemistry
Slices were washed in sHBSS, fixed for 5 min in 100% acetone, and washed in sHBSS containing 10% FBS. Antibodies were diluted 1:100 in sHBSS with 10% FBS. The slices were incubated for 1 h at room temperature with monoclonal mouse anti
-smooth muscle actin (product number A-2547; Sigma-Aldrich) or monoclonal mouse antipan cytokeratin (product number C-2562) antibodies. Slices were washed in sHBSS with 10% FBS, incubated for 1 h at room temperature with FITC-conjugated antimouse IgG (1:100 in sHBSS with 10% FBS), embedded in anti-fade solution (SlowFade; Molecular Probes), and inspected on a confocal microscope.
Measurement of Airway Contraction or Relaxation
Experiments were performed on lung slices containing airways cut in cross-section. Care was taken to select airways with a lumen that was free of agarose and completely lined by epithelial cells showing ciliary activity. The slices were placed on cover glasses within a custom made Plexiglas chamber, held in position by a nylon mesh (CMN-300-B; Small Parts Inc.) and observed with an inverted microscope (model Diaphot 300; Nikon) using a 20x objective. The bathing solution for all experiments was sHBSS. Phase-contrast images were recorded using a digital high speed CCD camera (model TM-6710; Pulnix America), a digital camera interface ("Road Runner"; BitFlow Inc.) and image acquisition software ("Video Savant"; IO Industries Inc.). Frames were captured in time-lapse (1 frame/s), stored in TIF stacks of several hundred frames, and analyzed on a Pentium III computer using the image analysis software "Scion" (Scion Corporation; free download: www.scioncorp.com). After calibrating the image dimensions and setting an appropriate threshold to distinguish the lumen from the surrounding tissue, the area of the airway lumen was measured with respect to time by pixel summing. To emulate a line-scanning analysis of airway contraction, a single row of pixels, aligned across the lumen of the airway, was extracted from each frame within the image stack and aligned sequentially into a single image. Each analysis was performed using custom written macros.
Measurements of Intracellular Free Ca2+ Concentration
Slices were loaded for 1 h at room temperature with 20 µM Oregon green (Molecular Probes) in sHBSS containing 0.2% pluronic (Pluronic F-127; Calbiochem), 100 µM sulfobromophthalein, and 3 mg/ml ascorbic acid. After loading, the slices were incubated for at least 30 min in sHBSS containing 100 µM sulfobromophthalein and 3 mg/ml ascorbic acid to allow for complete dye deesterification. The bath solution for all experiments was sHBSS containing 3 mg/ml ascorbic acid (antioxidant to reduce bleaching).
Confocal microscopy was performed with a custom-built microscope (Sanderson and Parker, 2002
) based on an inverted microscope. Briefly, the 488-nm line from an argon laser is scanned across the specimen with two oscillating mirrors (for X- and Y-scan). The resultant fluorescence (>510 nm) is detected by a photomultiplier tube. A video frame capture board digitizes the photomultiplier signal to form an image that is recorded to hard disc using the recording software "Video Savant." Images were recorded in time-lapse (1 or 4 frames/s, 420 pixels x 400 lines) or at high speed (60 frames/s, 420 pixels x 200 lines) for the detection of rapid changes. Regions of interest (ROI) of 10 x 10 pixels were defined in single SMCs. Average fluorescence intensities of an ROI were obtained, frame-by-frame, using a custom written macro. Bleach correction was calculated from the bleaching rate during a period of 1530 s before the addition of drugs. Raw data were corrected with the bleach correction before a rolling average of three frames was calculated. Final fluorescence values were expressed as a fluorescence ratio (F/F0) normalized to the initial fluorescence (F0). Because the confocal system was not capable of recording transmitted phase-contrast images simultaneously with confocal fluorescence images, airway contraction was analyzed by measuring the area of the part of the airway lumen that was visible in the confocal images.
Drug Application
ACH chloride, ACH-esterase, and halothane were dissolved in sHBSS. A 10x solution was diluted to the final concentration by addition to the volume of the bath solution (e.g., 10 µl of 10-5 M ACH was added to 90 µl bath solution for a final concentration of 10-6 M ACH). BAPTA-AM, xestospongin (Calbiochem), ryanodine, and thapsigargin were dissolved in DMSO and diluted in sHBSS to the final concentrations used.
Statistics
Statistical analysis was performed using the one way repeated measurements analysis of variance (all pair-wise multiple comparison procedures = Student-Newman-Keuls method). A P value of P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| RESULTS |
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-smooth muscle actin, respectively. SMCs could be identified by their fusiform shape and were in many cases found around the whole circumference of the airway. However, in some airways, only parts of the circumference contained SMCs. SMCs were found to be closely associated with ECs, and were often separated from the airway lumen by just one layer of ECs (Fig. 2 A). By contrast, ECs showed a typical cobblestone-like appearance and completely lined the airway lumen (Fig. 2 B).
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Morphology and contractility remained stable for at least 5 d in culture. Ciliary activity showed no apparent change for at least 10 d. After 10 d (without a change of culture medium), contractility decreased markedly and ciliary activity began to slow. As a result, experiments were performed only on slices 25 d old.
For the first few days after slice preparation, spontaneous airway contractions could be randomly observed (Fig. 3, before the addition of ACH). Unfortunately, a full systematic investigation of this phenomenon was hindered by its unpredictability. In lung slices of some mice, spontaneous contractions occurred in many airways, whereas in slices from other mice, no spontaneous activity could be observed at all. Similarly, the contractions ranged from "twitches" of parts of the airway wall without substantial change in airway lumen to contractions of the whole circumference, resulting in reduction of airway lumen of up to 50%. However, confocal microscopy did reveal that the spontaneous contractions occurred simultaneously with Ca2+ transients in SMCs. Whereas exposure to ACH-esterase (n = 4) or apyrase (n = 3) did not stop the contractions, exposure to a Ca2+-free solution immediately stopped the spontaneous contractions (n = 4; unpublished data). These results suggest that an influx of external Ca2+ may play a role in the mechanisms responsible for spontaneous contractions. A detailed analysis of this phenomenon is beyond the scope of this work and will be the focus of future studies.
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The Ca2+ response to ACH consisted of an initial transient increase in [Ca2+]i followed by Ca2+ oscillations (Figs. 5 and 6 A). By contrast, the [Ca2+]i in ECs did not change in response to ACH. The addition of sHBSS alone had no effect. To evaluate the concentration dependence of the Ca2+ response, five SMCs in different slices were exposed to 10-8, 10-6, and 10-3 M ACH; a washout and a 20-min recovery period was allowed between each ACH exposure. The increase in [Ca2+]i during the initial Ca2+ transient (the percent difference between the F/F0 measured immediately before and at maximum value of the Ca2+ transient) was concentration-dependent from 10 nM to 1 mM (8.9 ± 15.2% for 10-8 M, 33 ± 31.8% for 10-6 M, and 73.1 ± 19% for 10-3 M; increase in percent of baseline, mean ± SD, P < 0.05, Fig. 6 B). The frequency of the Ca2+ oscillations (the average period of 10 sequential oscillations) at 10-6 M (25.2 ± 16.2 min-1, mean ± SD) was higher than at 10-8 M (16.1 ± 17.5, P < 0.05) but did not differ between 10-6 and 10-3 M (28.4 ± 23.3; Fig. 6 C).
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| DISCUSSION |
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To address some of these difficulties, we have refined the use of lung slices. We found that SMCs within the slice maintained the ability to perform multiple contractions for at least 5 d. These slices required minimal maintenance and appeared healthy without any special culturing conditions. Healthy lung slices also were indicated by the presence of active cilia on the airway epithelial cells. The morphology of the slice appeared, as discernible with the light microscope, unaltered with the airway epithelial cells remaining cuboidal and the SMCs remaining elongated. Obviously, some connective tissue has been disrupted at the surface of the slices, but for cells in the middle of a slice, which are accessible with confocal microscopy, their environment approaches that of in situ. Thus, slices would appear ideal for the investigation of interactions, not only between SMCs, but also between SMCs and epithelial cells as well as the activity of individual SMCs and the response of the associated airway.
Despite these advantages, the lung slice is not without some difficulties. For example, lung slices do not adhere to the substrate and are easily displaced by experimental protocols. We have found that a piece nylon mesh can be used to hold slices in position. Lung slices also are not easily loaded with indicator dyes. This may be because the surface area of the cells in a slice that is accessible to the dye is significantly reduced by surrounding cells and connective tissue, but an increase in dye concentration and incubation time and the addition of an organic anion transporter blocker appeared to compensate for a low dye-loading rate. The process of obtaining a slice may be considered traumatic, but the process of cell isolation involves an enzymatic modification of the cell surface, a loss of cell contacts, and a lack of the connective tissue forces that mediate relaxation.
We used a higher concentration of agarose (2%) to stiffen the compliant lung tissue as compared with Dandurand et al. (1993)
and Martin et al. (1996)
, 1% and 0.75%, respectively. The stiffer lung and the use of a precision tissue slicer or vibratome, in place of manual or hand cutting, enabled us to obtain thin slices that allow the study of single cells within the slice with confocal microscopy.
ACH-induced Airway Contraction
Many studies on airway contraction have been performed using methacholine (MCH), a chemical analogue of ACH acting via muscarinic receptors that may vary in subtype selectivity depending on species and tissue (Tulic et al., 1999
). The choice to use MCH may have been based on the slower metabolism of MCH and the widespread use of MCH in clinical lung function tests. However, we choose to use ACH because ACH is readily metabolized by esterases for reversibility of experiments, contracts airway smooth muscle cells through activation of muscarinic receptors (Hall, 2000
), narrows airways in lung parenchymal strips (Salerno et al., 1996
) and induces Ca2+ oscillations in isolated tracheal SMCs (Liu and Farley, 1996
; Sims et al., 1996
; Prakash et al., 1997
, 2000
; Sieck et al., 1997
).
A concentration dependence of ACH-induced airway contraction was observed in the range of 10500 nM. At concentrations >500 nM, ACH induced maximal airway contraction, which was, on average,
80% of the initial area. However, these results contrast to MCH-induced narrowing in thicker lung slices where increasing concentrations of MCH led to a reduction in airway lumen to <20% and complete airway closure in up to one third of the airways (Dandurand et al., 1993
; Martin et al., 1996
; Minshall et al., 1997
). One explanation for this difference could be our use of a higher concentration of agarose to fill the lungs as compared with the previous studies because of our effort to cut thinner slices for the use with confocal microscopy. This could have increased the stiffness of the surrounding agarose-filled tissue. However, Dandurand et al. (1993)
reported that 16% of the airways closed in rat lung slices when using 2% agarose. The slices used in the present study were thinner and likely to have fewer SMCs per airway. Consequently, the number of SMCs may have been insufficient to generate the force required to narrow or close airways to the same extent.
ACH-induced Ca2+ Signaling
The Ca2+ response of airway SMCs to ACH showed a biphasic pattern consisting of an initial transient followed by Ca2+ oscillations. ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillations also have been reported to occur in isolated tracheal SMCs (Liu and Farley, 1996
; Sims et al., 1996
; Prakash et al., 1997
, 2000
; Sieck et al., 1997
). The oscillation frequencies in this study (
2030 per minute) were comparable to those found for isolated tracheal SMCs (Pabelick et al., 2001b
) although Sieck et al. (1997)
reported slower frequencies for bronchial SMCs. We also found, like Prakash et al. (2000)
, a concentration dependence of the frequency of the oscillations. This concentration dependence matched that of airway contraction, and this will be addressed later.
The Ca2+ oscillations were found to spread through the SMCs as intracellular Ca2+ waves. The propagation velocity (
48 µm/s) of the Ca2+ waves was higher than reported by Prakash et al. (2000)
, who found a velocity of 25 µm/s in isolated porcine tracheal SMCs. Differences in species, airway generation, and/or the different culture form may be responsible. A comparison of the Ca2+ oscillations in adjacent SMCs indicated that the Ca2+ oscillations occurred asynchronously. If SMCs in slices communicated (e.g., via gap junctions), this did not lead to a synchronization of the Ca2+ oscillations. However, all the cells may have been stimulated simultaneously with extracellular ACH, and communication between cells would not be required to initiate a response in each cell. Future experiments with stimulation of single cells will be required to explore the role of cellcell communication.
Although ACH induced Ca2+ oscillations in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, these oscillations subsequently ceased. This indicates that an influx of external Ca2+ is not directly required for ACH-induced Ca2+ signaling, but may be necessary to refill internal Ca2+ stores and compensate for Ca2+ losses across the cell membrane. Emptying of the internal Ca2+ stores using thapsigargin prevented the ACH-induced Ca2+ response, confirming the essential role of internal Ca2+ release. The abolishment of the Ca2+ signaling with the IP3R antagonist xestospongin indicates that, in murine bronchial SMCs, Ca2+ release from the SR occurs in part via the IP3R. Because the role of Ca2+ release via the RYR in agonist-induced Ca2+ signaling varies among SMCs of different origins (Savineau and Marthan, 2000
), we tested the role of the RYR in murine bronchial SMCs using ryanodine. The ACH-induced Ca2+ response was blocked by ryanodine, a result indicating that in these cells Ca2+ release also occurs via the RYR. Taken together, we suggest, for the mechanism of ACH-induced Ca2+ signaling in murine bronchial SMCs, an initial small IP3-induced Ca2+ release from the SR that is amplified by CICR via RYR with external Ca2+ influx occurring to compensate for Ca2+ losses to the extracellular space.
Correlation between Ca2+ Signaling in SMCs and Airway Contraction
Ca2+ contraction coupling in SMCs involves the Ca2+calmodulin complex that activates the myosin-light-chain kinase, which in turn phosphorylates the myosin-light-chain leading to crossbridge cycling and cell contraction. However, Ca2+-independent pathways for agonist-induced contraction exist and these may involve diacylglycerol, CPI-17, or Rho-kinases to inhibit myosin-light-chain phosphatase, and thereby increase myosin-light-chain phosphorylation (for reviews see Somlyo and Somlyo, 2000
; Pfitzer, 2001
). Because we were able to inhibit the ACH-induced airway contraction with intracellular BAPTA, the ACH-induced Ca2+ signaling appears to directly mediate contraction in murine bronchial SMCs.
The purpose of the present study was to correlate the Ca2+ signaling that occurs in SMCs with airway contraction. Previously, Shieh et al. (1991)
observed Ca2+ signaling in isolated SMCs and found that an initial Ca2+ transient was followed by a lower plateau of [Ca2+]i at a steady state, and suggested that the Ca2+ transient establishes tension and that the [Ca2+]i steady state maintains tension. Subsequently, Prakash et al. (2000)
found that the steady state of [Ca2+]i, in fact, consists of Ca2+ oscillations, and this led them to suggest that Ca2+ oscillations may provide a mechanism to regulate or integrate increases in global [Ca2+]i. However, evidence for different contractile states at different frequencies of Ca2+ oscillations was not available. In our study, the ACH-induced initial Ca2+ transient in the SMCs occurred simultaneously with ACH-induced airway contraction, and this was followed by Ca2+ oscillations. It is important to note that these Ca2+ oscillations persisted during the maintained airway contraction.
To stop ongoing ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillations, we used ACH-esterase to degrade ACH, we inhibited the refilling of the Ca2+ stores using Ca2+-free solution, or we added halothane to the bath. Pabelick et al. (2001a)
could show that halothane reduces SR Ca2+ content by increased "leak" through IP3- and RYR channels. In our study, halothane abolished ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillations after a short Ca2+ transient. However, in all cases, airway relaxation could be observed upon cessation of the Ca2+ oscillations without a substantial change in baseline [Ca2+]i, suggesting an essential role of Ca2+ oscillations in the maintenance of airway contraction.
The concentration response curves for ACH-induced Ca2+ oscillation frequency and airway contraction were very similar and these data may indicate a close relationship between the extent of airway contraction and the frequency of the Ca2+ oscillations. Similarly, in other systems, increases in the frequency of Ca2+ oscillations were induced by increasing concentrations of agonists and this led to the idea that frequency-encoding rather than the average [Ca2+]i regulates cellular activities (for reviews see Berridge et al., 2000
; Bootman et al., 2001
). The hypothesis for the implementation of frequency-modulated control is that the process in question has different activation and inactivation kinetics. For example, the Ca2+ oscillation may serve to quickly activate the phosphorylation of the myosin-light-chain via intermediaries while inactivation via dephosphorylation may take longer. As a result, intermittent Ca2+ pulses could maintain a prolonged response. In conclusion, we propose that Ca2+ oscillations are essential for maintaining the contractile state of the airway SMCs and, thereby, the airway contraction. Further, we hypothesize that this maintenance may be frequency-modulated.
| FOOTNOTES |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Submitted: 16 November 2001
Revised: 9 January 2002
Accepted: 11 January 2002
| REFERENCES |
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J. F. Perez and M. J. Sanderson The Frequency of Calcium Oscillations Induced by 5-HT, ACH, and KCl Determine the Contraction of Smooth Muscle Cells of Intrapulmonary Bronchioles J. Gen. Physiol., May 31, 2005; 125(6): 535 - 553. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. F. Perez and M. J. Sanderson The Contraction of Smooth Muscle Cells of Intrapulmonary Arterioles Is Determined by the Frequency of Ca2+ Oscillations Induced by 5-HT and KCl J. Gen. Physiol., May 31, 2005; 125(6): 555 - 567. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Laporte, A. Hui, and I. Laher Pharmacological Modulation of Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Function in Smooth Muscle Pharmacol. Rev., December 1, 2004; 56(4): 439 - 513. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Deng, N. J. Fairbank, B. Fabry, P. G. Smith, and G. N. Maksym Localized mechanical stress induces time-dependent actin cytoskeletal remodeling and stiffening in cultured airway smooth muscle cells Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, August 1, 2004; 287(2): C440 - C448. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Martin, R. Goggel, A.-R. Ressmeyer, and S. Uhlig Pressor responses to platelet-activating factor and thromboxane are mediated by Rho-kinase Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol, July 1, 2004; 287(1): L250 - L257. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Ji, M. E. Feldman, K.-Y. Deng, K. S. Greene, J. Wilson, J. C. Lee, R. C. Johnston, M. Rishniw, Y. Tallini, J. Zhang, et al. Ca2+-sensing Transgenic Mice: POSTSYNAPTIC SIGNALING IN SMOOTH MUSCLE J. Biol. Chem., May 14, 2004; 279(20): 21461 - 21468. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K.-H. Kuo, J. Dai, C. Y. Seow, C.-H. Lee, and C. van Breemen Relationship between asynchronous Ca2+ waves and force development in intact smooth muscle bundles of the porcine trachea Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol, December 1, 2003; 285(6): L1345 - L1353. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Zhang and M. J Sanderson The role of cGMP in the regulation of rabbit airway ciliary beat frequency J. Physiol., September 15, 2003; 551(3): 765 - 776. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Bergner and M. J. Sanderson Selected Contribution: Airway contractility and smooth muscle Ca2+ signaling in lung slices from different mouse strains J Appl Physiol, September 1, 2003; 95(3): 1325 - 1332. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Bergner and M. J. Sanderson ATP stimulates Ca2+ oscillations and contraction in airway smooth muscle cells of mouse lung slices Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol, December 1, 2002; 283(6): L1271 - L1279. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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