M. Neusser et al., EFFECTS OF PROTEIN-KINASE-C ACTIVATION ON INTRACELLULAR CA2-MUSCLE CELLS OF SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RATS( DISTRIBUTION IN VASCULAR SMOOTH), Journal of vascular research, 30(2), 1993, pp. 116-120
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Hematology,"Medicine, General & Internal",Physiology
Protein kinase C is known to influence contraction in vascular smooth
muscle cells by Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent mechanisms. In the
present study, the effect of protein kinase C activation by phorbol 1
2-myristate 13-acetate on resting cytosolic free Ca2+ and on cellular
Ca2+ pools was assessed in cultured rat aortic muscle cells using fura
2. Cellular Ca2+ pools were evaluated with the selective inhibitor of
the sarcoplasmic Ca2+ ATPase, thapsigargin. In normotensive vascular
smooth muscle cells, protein kinase C activation caused a redistributi
on of Ca2+ from the thapsigargin-sensitive pool into the cytoplasm, wh
ereas, in hyper-tensive cells, no significant effect of protein kinase
C activity on cellular Ca2+ distribution was found. It is concluded t
hat protein kinase C modulates the amount of Ca2+ stored in the thapsi
gargin-sensitive calcium stores. In hypertensive cells, the regulation
of Ca2+ pools by protein kinase C is disturbed.