Abstract

To understand the mechanism by which elevated sodium-lithium countertransport activity (SLC) associates with increased intracellular free calcium-ion concentration ([Ca2+]i), we investigated the relationship between SLC and the effects of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]o) and a Ca2(+)-channel blocker, nisoldipine, on [Ca2+]i in erythrocytes from 48 patients with non-insulin-dependent (Type 2) diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). There was a significant correlation between SLC and [Ca2+]i. Nisoldipine in the incubation medium significantly decreased [Ca2+]i, and there was a significant positive correlation between SLC and the degree of [Ca2+]i decrease. When the [Ca2+]o was elevated, [Ca2+]i was significantly increased, but nisoldipine almost completely suppressed this increase of [Ca2+]i. There was a significant positive correlation between SLC and the degree of the suppression. These data suggest that elevated SLC correlates with increased [Ca2+]i, and that the increased [Ca2i]i might be due to the increased Ca2+ influx through a dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ pathway.

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