Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP 3) is a second messenger responsible for Ca 2+ release from an internal store whose nature and location remains undefined. To get more information on this intracellular Ca 2+ store, a post-nuclear particulate fraction was prepared from bovine adrenal cortex and its Ca 2+ uptake and release activities were monitored with the fluorescent indicator Fura-2. In the presence of Mg 2+ (2 mM), the particulate preparation showed high ATP-dependent Ca 2+ sequestering activity and decreased the ambient Ca 2+ concentration to about 150 nM. In the absence of Mg 2+, Ca 2+ was still sequestered but less efficiently, reaching a level around 170 nM. In the presence of Mg 2+, the Ca 2+ released by a maximal dose of InsP 3 (2 μM) was completely resequestered whereas in the absence of Mg 2+, no resequestration occurred even after complete degradation of InsP 3. The use of selective agents such as oligomycin, saponin, ionomycin and biliary salts indicated that Ca 2+ was stored in three different pools which are distinct from the mitochondria and from inside-out membrane vesicles. Our data also indicate that InsP 3 releases Ca 2+ from a pool which is filled up by a Mg 2+-dependent Ca 2+ ATPase.
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