ELEVATION OF INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM LEVELS IN OUTER HAIR-CELLS BY TRIMETHYLTIN

Authors
Citation
Y. Liu et Ld. Fechter, ELEVATION OF INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM LEVELS IN OUTER HAIR-CELLS BY TRIMETHYLTIN, Toxicology in vitro, 10(5), 1996, pp. 567
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
Toxicology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08872333
Volume
10
Issue
5
Year of publication
1996
Database
ISI
SICI code
0887-2333(1996)10:5<567:EOICLI>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Outer hair cells are thought to modulate sensitivity of the peripheral auditory system to sound and they are frequently targets of injury by ototoxicants. These cells show an unusual motility that is thought to be critical to their physiological role and it is known that persiste nt contraction can be stimulated by an enhancement in intracellular ca lcium concentration ([Ca2+]i). Trimethyltin (TMT) disrupts functioning in the outer hair cell in vivo and produces a persistent contraction of these cells in vitro. Experiments were designed to determine whethe r TMT can alter [Ca2+]i levels in isolated outer hair cells maintained in primary culture and to determine the source of such an increase. P arallel positive and negative controls were included to ensure that ce ll depolarization using K+ did produce the expected enhancement of [Ca 2+]i and that exogenous glutamate stimulation produced no shift in [Ca 2+]i. Outer hair cells do not have glutamate receptors. The [Ca2+]i of isolated outer hair cells from guinea pigs were monitored dynamically using the calcium-sensitive fluorescent dye, Fura 2, after applicatio n of TMT (30 mu M(-1) mM), KCl (70 mM) or glutamate (100 mu M). Cells exposed to TMT show a slow but persistent [Ca2+]i increase that is obs erved with TMT concentrations as low as 30 mu M and is maximal at 100 mu M. The elevation in [Ca2+]i cannot be attenuated by using low calci um medium or by pretreating the cells with nifedipine, an L-type Ca2+- channel blocker. This suggests strongly that elevation of [Ca2+]i in o uter hair cells by TMT is not mediated by Ca2+ channels or by a genera l impairment in the cells' ability to exclude extracellular Ca2+ but, rather, results from release of calcium from intracellular stores. Cop yright (C) 1996 Elsevier Science Ltd.