Morphological response of endoplasmic reticulum in cerebellar Purkinje cells to calcium deprivation
- PMID: 1603335
- DOI: 10.1016/0306-4522(92)90411-t
Morphological response of endoplasmic reticulum in cerebellar Purkinje cells to calcium deprivation
Abstract
Mobilisable intracellular Ca2+ stores are highly enriched in the cerebellum, particularly in Purkinje cells. We have detected, by light and electron microscopy, striking morphological changes in the presumed Ca2+ stores of Purkinje cells when slices of eight-day-old rat cerebellum were incubated in Ca(2+)-deficient media. After 30 min under these conditions, the endoplasmic reticulum became thinned and elongated. By 2 h, it was transformed into multilamellar, whorl-like inclusions with electron-dense cores. These changes were reversed on reintroduction of Ca2+. Analogous changes in other neurons were not observed. The results suggest that Ca2+ storage sites within Purkinje cells are capable of dramatic morphological change depending on the availability of Ca2+. The transformations may reflect, initially, depletion of Ca2+ from the stores and then homeostatic alterations in their capacity.
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