scholarly journals Intercellular calcium signalling between chondrocytes and synovial cells in co-culture

1998 ◽  
Vol 329 (3) ◽  
pp. 681-687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola D'ANDREA ◽  
Alessandra CALABRESE ◽  
Micaela GRANDOLFO

Intercellular communication allows the co-ordination of cell metabolism between tissues as well as sensitivity to extracellular stimuli. Paracrine stimulation and cell-to-cell coupling through gap junctions induce the formation of complex cellular networks that favour the intercellular exchange of nutrients and second messengers. Heterologous intercellular communication was studied in co-cultures of articular chondrocytes and HIG-82 synovial cells by measuring mechanically induced cytosolic changes in Ca2+ ion levels by digital fluorescence video imaging. In confluent co-cultures, mechanical stimulation induced intercellular Ca2+ waves that propagated to both cell types with similar kinetics. Intercellular wave spreading was inhibited by 18α-glycyrrhetinic acid and by treatments inhibiting the activation of purinoreceptors, suggesting that intercellular signalling between these two cell types occurs both through gap junctions and ATP-mediated paracrine stimulation. In rheumatoid arthritis the formation of the synovial pannus induces structural changes at the chondrosynovial junction, where chondrocyte and synovial cells come into close apposition: these results provide the first evidence for direct intercellular communication between these two cell types.

1979 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
M L Ledbetter ◽  
M Lubin

Mammalian cells of different species differ in sensitivity to ouabain. This sensitivity is expressed as reduced intracellular K+ content, reduced rates of protein synthesis, and cessation of cell multiplication. Using 86Rb+ as a measure of intracellular K+, we found higher levels of radioactivity in mixtures of ouabain-sensitive and -resistant cells cultured in the presence of ouabain than predicted from pure cultures of the two component cell types. The simplest explanation is that K+ and 86Rb+ are being transferred from ouabain-resistant to ouabain-sensitive cells, enhancing the total intracellular 86Rb+ in the culture. A function, "index of cooperation," expresses this enhancement as a number ranging from 0 to 1, and permits comparisons to be made under various culture conditions and using various cell types. An index of cooperation greater than 0 requires cell contact, since no enhancement occurs when contact between two cell types in the same culture is prevented. The index of cooperation for a number of different cell combinations agrees with other measures of cell-cell interaction associated with gap junctions, such as electrical coupling and metabolic cooperation. Coculture of ouabain-sensitive and ouabain-resistant cells in the presence of ouabain also leads to restoration of the capacity for protein synthesis. Autoradiography shows that this restoration occurs in the sensitive cell type and is dependent upon contact with ouabain-resistant cells. Furthermore, sensitive cells are able to multiply in the presence of ouabain when cocultured with resistant cells. Thus K+, presumably transferred to sensitive cells through gap junctions, is able to counteract the toxic effects of ouabain on intracellular K+ levels and protein synthesis, and to restore growth.


Zygote ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Sánchez Toranzo ◽  
J. Oterino ◽  
L. Zelarayán ◽  
F. Bonilla ◽  
M.I. Bühler

SUMMARYIt has been demonstrated in Bufo arenarum that fully grown oocytes are capable of meiotic resumption in the absence of a hormonal stimulus if they are deprived of their follicular envelopes. This event, called spontaneous maturation, only takes place in oocytes collected during the reproductive period, which have a metabolically mature cytoplasm.In Bufo arenarum, progesterone acts on the oocyte surface and causes modifications in the activities of important enzymes, such as a decrease in the activity of adenylate cyclase (AC) and the activation of phospholipase C (PLC). PLC activation leads to the formation of diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol triphosphate (IP3), second messengers that activate protein kinase C (PKC) and cause an increase in intracellular Ca2+. Recent data obtained from Bufo arenarum show that progesterone-induced maturation causes significant modifications in the level and composition of neutral lipids and phospholipids of whole fully grown ovarian oocytes and of enriched fractions in the plasma membrane. In amphibians, the luteinizing hormone (LH) is responsible for meiosis resumption through the induction of progesterone production by follicular cells.The aim of this work was to study the importance of gap junctions in the spontaneous and LH-induced maturation in Bufo arenarum oocytes. During the reproductive period, Bufo arenarum oocytes are capable of undergoing spontaneous maturation in a similar way to mammalian oocytes while, during the non-reproductive period, they exhibit the behaviour that is characteristic of amphibian oocytes, requiring progesterone stimulation for meiotic resumption (incapable oocytes).This different ability to mature spontaneously is coincident with differences in the amount and composition of the phospholipids in the oocyte membranes. Capable oocytes exhibit in their membranes higher quantities of phospholipids than incapable oocytes, especially of PC and PI, which are precursors of second messengers such as DAG and IP3.The uncoupling of the gap junctions with 1-octanol or halothane fails to induce maturation in follicles from the non-reproductive period, whose oocytes are incapable of maturing spontaneously. However, if the treatment is performed during the reproductive period, with oocytes capable of undergoing spontaneous maturation, meiosis resumption occurs in high percentages, similar to those obtained by manual defolliculation.Interestingly, results show that LH is capable of inducing GVBD in both incapable oocytes and in oocytes capable of maturing spontaneously as long as follicle cells are present, which would imply the need for a communication pathway between the oocyte and the follicle cells. This possibility was analysed by combining LH treatment with uncoupling agents such as 1-octanol or halothane. Results show that maturation induction with LH requires a cell–cell coupling, as the uncoupling of the gap junctions decreases GVBD percentages. Experiments with LH in the presence of heparin, BAPTA/AM and theophylline suggest that the hormone could induce GVBD by means of the passage of IP3 or Ca2+ through the gap junctions, which would increase the Ca2+ level in the oocyte cytoplasm and activate phosphodiesterase (PDE), thus contributing to the decrease in cAMP levels and allowing meiosis resumption.


2007 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Fliegert ◽  
A. Gasser ◽  
A.H. Guse

cADPR [cyclic ADPR (ADP-ribose)], NAADP (nicotinic acid–adenine dinucleotide phosphate) and ADPR belong to the family of adenine-containing second messengers. They are metabolically related and are all involved in the regulation of cellular Ca2+ homoeostasis. Activation of specific plasma membrane receptors is connected to cADPR formation in many cell types and tissues. In contrast receptor-mediated formation of NAADP and ADPR has been shown only in a few selected cellular systems. The intracellular Ca2+ channel triggered by cADPR is the RyR (ryanodine receptor); in the case of NAADP, both activation of RyR and a novel Ca2+ channel have been proposed. In contrast, ADPR opens the non-specific cation channel TRPM2 [TRP (transient receptor potential) melastatin 2] that belongs to the TRP family of ion channels.


2002 ◽  
Vol 282 (6) ◽  
pp. C1254-C1260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleg V. Kolomytkin ◽  
Andrew A. Marino ◽  
David D. Waddell ◽  
J. Michael Mathis ◽  
Robert E. Wolf ◽  
...  

Synovial cells can form networks connected by gap junctions. The purpose of this study was to obtain evidence for a necessary role of gap junction intercellular communication in protein secretion by synovial cells. We developed a novel assay to measure the enzymatic activity of metalloproteinases (MMPs) produced by synovial cells in response to interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and employed the assay to explore the biological function of gap junctions. IL-1β produced a dose-dependent increase in MMP activity that was blocked by exposure to the gap junction inhibitors 18α-glycyrrhetinic acid and octanol for as few as 50 min. The inhibitors produced an immediate and marked reduction in intercellular communication, as assessed by transient current analysis using the nystatin perforated-patch method. These observations suggest that communication through gap junctions early in IL-1β signal transduction is critical to the process of cytokine-regulated secretion of MMPs by synovial cells.


2000 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
DIANNA A. JOHNSON ◽  
STEPHEN L. MILLS ◽  
MICHAEL F. HABERECHT ◽  
STEPHEN C. MASSEY

In the mature rabbit retina, two classes of horizontal cells, A type and B type, provide lateral inhibition in the outer plexiform layer (OPL) and spatially modify the activation of bipolar cells by photoreceptors. Gap junctions connecting homologous horizontal cells determine the extent to which this inhibitory activity spreads laterally across the OPL. Little is currently known about the expression of gap junctions in horizontal cells during postnatal development or how cell–cell coupling might contribute to subsequent maturational events. We have examined the morphological attributes and coupling properties of developing A and B type horizontal cells in neonatal rabbit retina using intracellular injections of Lucifer Yellow and Neurobiotin. Prelabeling with DAPI permitted the targeting of horizontal cell bodies for intracellular injection in perfused preparations of isolated retina. A and B type horizontal cells were identifiable at birth although their dendritic field sizes had not reached adult proportions and their synaptic contacts in the OPL were minimal. Both cell types exhibited homologous dye coupling at birth. Similar to that seen in the adult, no heterologous coupling was observed, and homologous coupling among A type cells was stronger than that observed among B type cells. The spread of tracer compounds through gap junctions of morphologically immature horizontal cells suggests that ions and other small, bioactive compounds may likewise spread through coupled, horizontal networks to coordinate the subsequent maturational of emerging outer plexiform layer pathways.


1991 ◽  
Vol 260 (5) ◽  
pp. C975-C981 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. K. Moore ◽  
E. C. Beyer ◽  
J. M. Burt

Recent evidence suggest that coordination of blood flow in the microcirculation involves cell-to-cell coupling via gap junctions. In this study, using A7r5 cells as a model of vascular smooth muscle, we have characterized the gap junctions in terms of the unitary conductances of the observed channels, the responses to second messengers, and subunit protein composition. The cells were typically well coupled several hours after plating, with junctional conductances on the order 20-40 nS. Channels with mean conductances of 36 and 89 pS were observed in low-conductance cell pairs and in cell pairs whose macroscopic conductance was reduced by exposure to halothane. Connexin43 was the only known gap junction sequence detected by Northern blots (low and high stringency), immunoblots, or immunohistochemical studies. Junctional conductance was reduced 15% by 8-bromoadenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate; 8-bromoguanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate had no effect. The results suggest that connexin43 can form stable channels of at least two distinct conductances and gap junctions with differing responses to second messengers.


Author(s):  
Camillo Peracchia ◽  
Stephen J. Girsch

The fiber cells of eye lens communicate directly with each other by exchanging ions, dyes and metabolites. In most tissues this type of communication (cell coupling) is mediated by gap junctions. In the lens, the fiber cells are extensively interconnected by junctions. However, lens junctions, although morphologically similar to gap junctions, differ from them in a number of structural, biochemical and immunological features. Like gap junctions, lens junctions are regions of close cell-to-cell apposition. Unlike gap junctions, however, the extracellular gap is apparently absent in lens junctions, such that their thickness is approximately 2 nm smaller than that of typical gap junctions (Fig. 1,c). In freeze-fracture replicas, the particles of control lens junctions are more loosely packed than those of typical gap junctions (Fig. 1,a) and crystallize, when exposed to uncoupling agents such as Ca++, or H+, into pseudo-hexagonal, rhombic (Fig. 1,b) and orthogonal arrays with a particle-to-particle spacing of 6.5 nm. Because of these differences, questions have been raised about the interpretation of the lens junctions as communicating junctions, in spite of the fact that they are the only junctions interlinking lens fiber cells.


Author(s):  
W. J. Larsen ◽  
R. Azarnia ◽  
W. R. Loewenstein

Although the physiological significance of the gap junction remains unspecified, these membrane specializations are now recognized as common to almost all normal cells (excluding adult striated muscle and some nerve cells) and are found in organisms ranging from the coelenterates to man. Since it appears likely that these structures mediate the cell-to-cell movement of ions and small dye molecules in some electrical tissues, we undertook this study with the objective of determining whether gap junctions in inexcitable tissues also mediate cell-to-cell coupling.To test this hypothesis, a coupling, human Lesh-Nyhan (LN) cell was fused with a non-coupling, mouse cl-1D cell, and the hybrids, revertants, and parental cells were analysed for coupling with respect both to ions and fluorescein and for membrane junctions with the freeze fracture technique.


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