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. 1995 Apr 7;270(14):8102-7.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.14.8102.

Coordination of Ca2+ signaling by intercellular propagation of Ca2+ waves in the intact liver

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Free article

Coordination of Ca2+ signaling by intercellular propagation of Ca2+ waves in the intact liver

L D Robb-Gaspers et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Activation of the inositol lipid signaling system results in cytosolic Ca2+ oscillations and intra- and intercellular Ca2+ waves in many isolated cell preparations. However, this form of temporal and spatial organization of signaling has not been demonstrated in intact tissues. Digital imaging fluorescence microscopy was used to monitor Ca2+ at the cellular and subcellular level in intact perfused rat liver loaded with fluorescent Ca2+ indicators. Perfusion with low doses of vasopressin induced oscillations of hepatocyte Ca2+ that were coordinated across entire lobules of the liver by propagation of Ca2+ waves along the hepatic plates. At the subcellular level these periodic Ca2+ waves initiated from the sinusoidal domain of cells within the periportal region and propagated radially across cell-cell contacts into the pericentral region, or until terminated by annihilation collision with other Ca2+ wave fronts. With increasing agonist dose, the frequency but not the amplitude of the Ca2+ waves increased. Intracellular Ca2+ wave rates were constant, but transcellular signal propagation was determined by agonist dose, giving rise to a dose-dependent increase in the rate at which Ca2+ waves spread through the liver. At high vasopressin doses, a single Ca2+ wave was observed and the direction of Ca2+ wave propagation was reversed, initiating in the pericentral region and spreading to the periportal region. It is concluded that intercellular Ca2+ waves may provide a mechanism to coordinate responses across the functional units of the liver.

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