Abstract

The phosphoinositide signaling pathway, which mediates neurotransmitter responses, was studied in Xenopus oocytes by recording membrane currents evoked using lightflash photolysis of caged inositol trisphosphate (caged IP3) to produce rapid and reproducible transients in intracellular IP3 levels. Photolysis of caged IP3 evoked currents which were carried largely by chloride ions and depended upon intracellular, but not extracellular, calcium. A given light flash evoked larger responses when the amount of caged IP3 loaded into the oocyte was increased, and illumination of the vegetal hemisphere gave larger responses than the animal. Long (10 sec) light exposures produced oscillatory currents, resembling responses to serotonin and other agonists, which became larger, more transient, and of shorter latency as the light intensity was increased. Brief (ca. 100 msec) flashes evoked a single "spike" of current. The caged IP3 response showed a threshold, in that light flashes had to be greater than a certain intensity and duration before currents could be detected. Associated with this, sub- and suprathreshold light flashes caused a long-lasting (seconds or minutes) potentiation of responses to subsequent test flashes. The lightflash response was also potentiated by a preceding intracellular injection of IP3 and by extracellular application of an agonist thought to induce IP3 liberation. However, intracellular injections of calcium depressed the response. We conclude that the liberation of calcium from intracellular stores varies nonlinearly with the intracellular level of IP3. This phenomenon may explain earlier observations, including the long latency of currents evoked by low doses of agonists such as acetylcholine and serotonin, and the nonlinear facilitation seen between these agonists. Further, it suggests a mechanism for "chemical integration," which may be important in the functioning of neurons and other cells which use IP3 as an intracellular messenger.

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