Hormone effects on cellular Ca2+ fluxes
- PMID: 2496641
- DOI: 10.1146/annurev.ph.51.030189.000543
Hormone effects on cellular Ca2+ fluxes
Abstract
The involvement of inositol lipid metabolism in agonist-mediated Ca2+ signaling by Ins 1,4,5-P3 has become firmly established. Recent advances have led to a better understanding of the proteins associated with signal transduction in the plasma membrane. A number of specific receptors (G proteins, phospholipases and inositol lipid kinases) have now been purified and characterized. An Ins 1,4,5-P3 receptor has also been purified which is presumably involved in mediating Ca2+ efflux from intracellular stores. The morphological site of the hormone-sensitive Ca2+ pool has been tentatively identified as discrete, specialized intracellular structures (calciosomes), but further studies are required to demonstrate that these contain Ins 1,4,5-P3-gated Ca2+ channels and their possible functional relationship to the plasma membrane. Receptor occupancy by Ca2+ mobilizing agonists also stimulates Ca2+ entry into the cell, but the mechanism for activation of voltage insensitive Ca2+ channels and the possible involvement of Ins 1,4,5-P3, Ins 1,3,4,5-P4 and/or G proteins in this process has not been established. The Ca2+ signaling pathway is subject to multisite feedback regulation by Ca2+ itself and by a diacylglycerol-mediated activation of protein kinase C. Potential sites for Ca2+ interaction are displacement of Ins 1,4,5-P3 from its receptor by a Ca2+-dependent mechanism, promotion of Ins 1,3,4,5-P4 formation by the Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated Ins 1,4,5-P3 3-kinase, and efflux of Ca2+ from the cell or sequestration into intracellular Ca2+ stores by Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated Ca2+-ATPases. Protein kinase C activation potentially affects the rate of generation of Ins 1,4,5-P3 by negative feedback to the receptor-G protein-phospholipase C transduction system and possibly also the rate of Ins 1,4,5-P3 degradation by activation of an inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphomonoesterase. It may also attenuate the Ca2+ transient directly by increasing the activity of Ca2+-ATPases associated with the plasma membrane and the endoplasmic reticulum. Cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the relative control strengths of these different mechanisms may explain the differences in the Ca2+ signal in different tissues and even in different cells within a population. The ability of Ca2+ and protein kinase C to provide negative feedback at various points in the signal transduction pathway suggests that a complex mechanism involving multiple feedback loops is likely to regulate the generation of Ca2+ oscillations seen in some cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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