Isolated bovine adrenal chromaffin cells exposed to single 2-, 4-, or 5-ns pulses undergo a rapid, transient rise in intracellular Ca2+ mediated by Ca2+ entry via voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs), mimicking the activation of these cells in vivo by acetylcholine. However, pulse durations 150 ns or longer elicit larger amplitude and longer-lived Ca2+ responses due to Ca2+ influx via both VGCCs and a yet to be identified plasma membrane pathway(s). To further our understanding of the differential effects of ultrashort versus longer pulse durations on Ca2+ influx, chromaffin cells were loaded with calcium green-1 and exposed to single 3-, 5-, 11-, 25-, or 50-ns pulses applied at their respective Ca2+ activation threshold electric fields. Increasing pulse duration from 3 or 5 ns to only 11 ns was sufficient to elicit increased amplitude and longer-lived Ca2+ responses in the majority of cells, a trend that continued as pulse duration increased to 50 ns. The amplification of Ca2+ responses was not the result of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores and was accompanied by a decreased effectiveness of VGCC inhibitors to block the responses and a reduced reliance on extracellular Na+ and membrane depolarization to evoke the responses. Inhibitors of pannexin channels, P2X receptors, or non-selective cation channels failed to attenuate 50-ns-elicited Ca2+ responses, ruling out these Ca2+-permeable channels as secondary Ca2+ entry pathways. Analytical calculations and numerical modeling suggest that the parameter that best determines the response of chromaffin cells to increasing pulse durations is the time the membrane charges to its peak voltage. These results highlight the pronounced sensitivity of a neuroendocrine cell to pulse durations differing by only tens of nanoseconds, which has important implications for the future development of nanosecond pulse technologies enabling electrostimulation applications for spatially focused and graded in vivo neuromodulation.
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