Abstract

The intracellular calcium ion concentration ([Ca 2+] i) in individual bovine anterior pituitary cells was measured using fura-2 and ratiometric imaging. Addition of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) in the presence of external calcium ion ([Ca 2+] e; 1 mM) caused a rapid transient increase in [Ca 2+] i falling to a plateau which remained above pre-stimulation levels in the continued presence of TRH. Decreasing [Ca 2+] e to 0.1 μM decreased [Ca 2+] i. At 0.1 μM [Ca 2+] e, the first TRH addition caused the rapid transient rise in [Ca 2+] i but no plateau phase and a second addition of TRH did not cause a second transient rise. However, the second application of TRH in 0.1 μM [Ca 2+] e caused a rise in [Ca 2+] i if it was preceded by transient exposure of the cells to 2 mM [Ca 2+] e. The presence of nitrendipine, 2,5-di-(tert-butyl)-1,4-benzohydroquinone (tBHQ), or TRH during the re-exposure to external calcium blocked this recovery of subsequent responses to TRH in the presence of only 0.1 μM [Ca 2+] e. We conclude that refilling of the calcium stores depleted by TRH occurred only after the removal of agonist, used a tBHQ-sensitive uptake mechanism, and was mainly sustained by voltage-gated calcium entry into the cells.

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