Abstract

The early events related to intracellular signals after prolactin (PRL) activation in T lymphocytes are not clearly established. The aim of this work was to study the effect of PRL in cytosolic calcium levels in human T lymphocytes. By using the dye FURA-2 AM, the variations in cytosolic Ca 2+ were studied in peripheral human T lymphocytes isolated from extracted blood from healthy donors. Fifty nanograms per milliliter PRL induces a small increase in cytosolic calcium. When the cells are preincubated overnight (16–20 h) in the presence of PRL, the increase in calcium is higher. This high increase is due to the release from intracellular pools and to the influx from the extracellular media. That is, after overnight incubation with PRL, calcium influx in T cells follows the capacitative model. Since PRL receptor (PRL-R) activation involves the tyrosine kinase pathway, we check calcium effect in the presence of genistein, a known inhibitor of tyrosine kinases. When cells are preincubated in the presence of 10 μM genistein, and PRL is immediately added, no increase in cytosolic calcium is observed. The presence of genistein also completely blocks the increase in cytosolic calcium stimulated by PRL after overnight incubation with PRL. In the presence of PRL and N, N-dimethyl- d-erythro-sphingosine (DMS), a stimulus that increases cytosolic calcium in T cells by tyrosine kinase stimulation, a high, even insignificant, calcium influx is induced. However, when the cells are incubated overnight in the presence of PRL, and then DMS is added, a significant increase in cytosolic calcium levels takes place. This increase is associated with an increase in calcium release from intracellular pools and an increase in calcium uptake. Genistein reduces the influx of external calcium induced by DMS after short incubation with PRL and significantly inhibits both, calcium pools empty, and calcium influx is induced by DMS after overnight incubation with PRL. In summary, PRL induces calcium influx in normal T lymphocytes. The influx is magnified after long PRL exposures, intracellular Ca 2+ pool-dependent, and activated through tyrosine kinases.

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