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Regulation of Extracellular UTP-Activated Cl Current by P2Y-PLC-PKC Signaling and ATP Hydrolysis in Mouse Ventricular Myocytes

J Physiol Sci Vol.57, No.2 pp.85-94
Shintaro Yamamoto, Kunihiko Ichishima, Tsuguhisa Ehara
Abstract: The intracellular signaling pathways responsible for extracellualr uridine-5′-triphosphate (UTPo)-induced chloride (Cl) currents (ICl.UTP) were studied in mouse ventricular myocytes with the whole-cell clamp technique. UTPo (0.1 to 100 µM) activated a whole-cell current that showed a time-independent activation, a linear current-voltage relationship in symmetrical Cl solutions, an anion selectivity of Cl> iodide > aspartate, and an inhibition by a thiazolidinone-derived specific inhibitor (CFTRinh-172, 10 µM) of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), but not by a disulfonic stilbene derivative (DIDS, 100 µM), these properties matching those of CFTR Cl channels. The potency order of nucleotides for an activation of the Cl current was UTP = ATP > uridine-5′-diphosphate (UDP) = ADP. Suramin (100 µM), a P2Y receptor antagonist, strongly inhibited the UTPo-activation of the Cl current, whereas pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′-disulfonic acid (PPADS, 100 µM), another P2Y receptor antagonist, induced little inhibition of ICl.UTP. The activation of ICl.UTP was sensitive to protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor, intracellular GDPβS (nonhydrolyzable GDP analogue) or anti-Gq/11 antibody. UTPo failed to activate the Cl current when the cells were dialyzed with nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues (ATPS or AMP-PNP) without ATP, suggesting that ATP hydrolysis is a prerequisite for the current activation. ICl.UTP was persistently activated with a mixture of ATPγS + ATP in the pipette, suggesting the involvement of phosphorylation reaction in the current activation process. Our results strongly suggest that ICl.UTP is due to the activation of CFTR Cl channels through Gq/11-coupled P2Y2 receptor-PLC-PKC signaling and ATP hydrolysis in mouse heart.

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Department of Physiology, Saga University Faculty of Medicine, Saga, 849-8501 Japan. yamamot3@cc.saga-u.ac.jp