The free intracellular calcium concentration, [Ca2+]i, was studied in single myotubes using the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator fura-2. Myotubes cultured from satellite cells of small muscle specimens from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients were compared with human control myotubes and with myotubes cultured from MDX and control mouse muscle satellite cells. The resting [Ca2+]i levels in DMD and control myotubes were not significantly different, i.e. 104 +/- 26 nM (mean +/- SD, n = 190 cells from eight DMD patients) compared with 97 +/- 25 nM (175/seven controls) and were not significantly lower than the corresponding murine values (154 +/- 33 nM, n = 135 MDX myotubes; 159 +/- 34 nM, n = 135 controls). All myotubes reacted to 10 microM acetylcholine or 40 mM KCl with fast transient increases of [Ca2+]i. After application of a hyposmotic (130 mOsm) solution, [Ca2+]i was increased 1.5- to 3-fold within 2-3 min, the DMD myotubes tending to stronger reactions (significantly higher [Ca2+]i in 2 out of 6 cases). The response was usually transient, [Ca2+]i decreasing to the initial level within 10 min. Gadolinium (50 microM) reduced the response by 50%-70%, indicating that the osmotic shock increased Ca2+ influx. During exposure to high (15 mM) [Ca2+]e, [Ca2+]i of DMD and control cells was 1.5- to 2-fold higher. Adult muscle fibres from MDX mice and controls showed identical Ca2+ resting levels (n = 45 fibres from three mice in each case), but did not respond to decreased external osmolarity with a change in [Ca2+]i. The results indicate that lack of dystrophin in muscle fibres does not necessarily lead to increased [Ca2+]i.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The effect of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with severe polyradiculoneuritis (Guillain-Barré syndrome, GBS) on voltage-dependent Na+ channels of myoballs was studied. The transient Na+ currents, elicited by repetitive stimulation at 1 Hz, were inhibited by the CSF from most of the GBS patients to 10%-40% the control value. The inhibition was complete in about 5 s and was fully reversible. Such inhibition was never seen with control CSF. The blocking property of the CSF from GBS patients was lost after the number of cells and the protein content had been lowered by means of a clinical filtration technique for cerebrospinal fluid. The results demonstrate that in Guillain-Barré syndrome blocking factors of Na+ channels are present in the CSF, impairing neuron impulse conduction, and thereby causing muscular weakness and sensory disturbances in the affected patient.
The synthesis of D-3-deoxy-myo-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate is reported together with its effect on Ca2+ release in permeabilized NIH 3T3 cells.The importance of inositol phosphates for intracellular signalling is now well appreciated.l.2 Stimulation of cell surface receptors by a variety of ligands initiates the hydrolysis of the membrane-located phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphos-
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