Abstract

Human umbilical vein endothelial cells were grown to confluence, as first passage cells, on coverslips. Treatment with ionomycin or histamine caused a sustained rise in intracellular Ca2+ (measured by Fura-2 fluorescence), but after treatment with thrombin, only a transient rise in Ca2+ was observed. Furthermore, the addition of thrombin after ionomycin or histamine lowered the raised Ca2+ back to near control levels. This effect of thrombin was concentration dependent, with increasing concentrations producing increases in both the rate and extent of the lowering of Ca2+. A similar effect of thrombin was seen on video imaging of Fura-2-loaded cell monolayers. The Ca2(+)-lowering effect of thrombin was not mimicked by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate nor blocked by staurosporine, indicating a lack of involvement of protein kinase C; intracellular pH also does not appear to be involved. The mechanism by which thrombin lowers cytoplasmic Ca2+ is due mainly to inhibition of Ca2+ entry since thrombin prevented the stimulated influx of Mn2+ caused by histamine or ionomycin. It may therefore be that in vivo under certain physiological or pathological conditions, thrombin's effects on intracellular Ca2+ are more transient than those of histamine, and thrombin also may induce transience in histamine's actions.

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