Abstract

Rabbit pancreatic acinar cells, permeabilized by saponin treatment, rapidly accumulated 3.5 nmol of Ca2+/mg protein in an energy-dependent pool when incubated at an ambient free Ca2+ concentration of 100 nM. Maximal loading of the internal stores was reached at 10 min and remained unchanged thereafter. Complete inhibition of the Ca2+ pump with thapsigargin revealed that this plateau was the result of a steady-state between slow Ca2+ efflux and ATP-driven Ca2+ uptake. Sixty percent of the pool could be released by Ins(1,4,5)P3, whereas GTP released another twenty percent. The striking finding of this study is that the energy-dependent store could also be released by ruthenium red. Uptake experiments in the presence of ruthenium red revealed that the dye, at concentrations below 100 microM, selectively reduced the size of the Ins(1,4,5)P3-releasable pool. Ruthenium red had no effect on the half-maximal stimulatory concentration of Ins(1,4,5)P3. At concentrations beyond 100 microM, the dye also affected the GTP-releasable pool. Comparison with thapsigargin revealed that ruthenium red released Ca2+ from stores loaded to steady-state at a rate markedly faster than can be explained by inhibition of the ATPase alone. From the data presented, we concluded that ruthenium red selectively releases Ca2+ from the Ins(1,4,5)P3-sensitive store by activating a Ca2+ release channel, whereas Ca2+ release from the GTP-sensitive store is predominantly caused by inhibition of the Ca2+ pump. The postulated ruthenium red-sensitive Ca2+ release channel might be similar to the ryanodine-receptor in muscle.

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