Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes.

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Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes. / Hohenegger, M; Berg, I; Weigl, L; Mayr, Georg W.; Potter, B V; Guse, A H.

in: BRIT J PHARMACOL, Jahrgang 128, Nr. 6, 6, 1999, S. 1235-1240.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Hohenegger, M, Berg, I, Weigl, L, Mayr, GW, Potter, BV & Guse, AH 1999, 'Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes.', BRIT J PHARMACOL, Jg. 128, Nr. 6, 6, S. 1235-1240. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10578137?dopt=Citation>

APA

Hohenegger, M., Berg, I., Weigl, L., Mayr, G. W., Potter, B. V., & Guse, A. H. (1999). Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes. BRIT J PHARMACOL, 128(6), 1235-1240. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10578137?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Hohenegger M, Berg I, Weigl L, Mayr GW, Potter BV, Guse AH. Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes. BRIT J PHARMACOL. 1999;128(6):1235-1240. 6.

Bibtex

@article{094370fadca64e5a83d8e738f84feccd,
title = "Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes.",
abstract = "1 Recently, we provided evidence for cyclic adenosine 5'-diphosphate-ribose, cADP-ribose, as a second messenger in Jurkat T-lymphocytes upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor/CD3- complex (Guse et al., 1999). cADP-ribose mobilizes Ca2+ from an intracellular Ca2+ store which is sensitive to caffeine and gated by the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel. In the present study we investigated the ability of the trypanocidal drug, suramin, to activate the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. Since suramin cannot permeate the plasma membrane, it was necessary to microinject the drug into Fura-2 loaded T-lymphocytes. 2 In a dose dependent manner suramin increased the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The dose-response curve is very steep and calculates for an EC50 of 7. 6+/-2.9 mM suramin in the injection pipette. 3 Co-injection of the selective ryanodine receptor inhibitor ruthenium red completely abolished the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. This finding allows for the conclusion that the IP3-receptor sensitive Ca2+ pool is not the primary target of the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. 4 Furthermore, Ins(1,4,6)PS3, an antagonist of the InsP3-receptor could not suppress the suramin-induced Ca2+ signal. The suramin induced Ca2+ transients declined very slowly; however, in the presence of Ins(1,4,6)PS3 this decay was accelerated. In addition, suramin did not interact with the cADP-ribose binding site of the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. 5 In conclusion, suramin is found to be an agonist for the T-cell ryanodine receptor as previously found for the cardiac and skeletal muscle isoform. Therefore, suramin can be designated a universal ryanodine receptor agonist.",
author = "M Hohenegger and I Berg and L Weigl and Mayr, {Georg W.} and Potter, {B V} and Guse, {A H}",
year = "1999",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "128",
pages = "1235--1240",
journal = "BRIT J PHARMACOL",
issn = "0007-1188",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pharmacological activation of the ryanodine receptor in Jurkat T-lymphocytes.

AU - Hohenegger, M

AU - Berg, I

AU - Weigl, L

AU - Mayr, Georg W.

AU - Potter, B V

AU - Guse, A H

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - 1 Recently, we provided evidence for cyclic adenosine 5'-diphosphate-ribose, cADP-ribose, as a second messenger in Jurkat T-lymphocytes upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor/CD3- complex (Guse et al., 1999). cADP-ribose mobilizes Ca2+ from an intracellular Ca2+ store which is sensitive to caffeine and gated by the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel. In the present study we investigated the ability of the trypanocidal drug, suramin, to activate the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. Since suramin cannot permeate the plasma membrane, it was necessary to microinject the drug into Fura-2 loaded T-lymphocytes. 2 In a dose dependent manner suramin increased the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The dose-response curve is very steep and calculates for an EC50 of 7. 6+/-2.9 mM suramin in the injection pipette. 3 Co-injection of the selective ryanodine receptor inhibitor ruthenium red completely abolished the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. This finding allows for the conclusion that the IP3-receptor sensitive Ca2+ pool is not the primary target of the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. 4 Furthermore, Ins(1,4,6)PS3, an antagonist of the InsP3-receptor could not suppress the suramin-induced Ca2+ signal. The suramin induced Ca2+ transients declined very slowly; however, in the presence of Ins(1,4,6)PS3 this decay was accelerated. In addition, suramin did not interact with the cADP-ribose binding site of the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. 5 In conclusion, suramin is found to be an agonist for the T-cell ryanodine receptor as previously found for the cardiac and skeletal muscle isoform. Therefore, suramin can be designated a universal ryanodine receptor agonist.

AB - 1 Recently, we provided evidence for cyclic adenosine 5'-diphosphate-ribose, cADP-ribose, as a second messenger in Jurkat T-lymphocytes upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor/CD3- complex (Guse et al., 1999). cADP-ribose mobilizes Ca2+ from an intracellular Ca2+ store which is sensitive to caffeine and gated by the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel. In the present study we investigated the ability of the trypanocidal drug, suramin, to activate the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. Since suramin cannot permeate the plasma membrane, it was necessary to microinject the drug into Fura-2 loaded T-lymphocytes. 2 In a dose dependent manner suramin increased the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The dose-response curve is very steep and calculates for an EC50 of 7. 6+/-2.9 mM suramin in the injection pipette. 3 Co-injection of the selective ryanodine receptor inhibitor ruthenium red completely abolished the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. This finding allows for the conclusion that the IP3-receptor sensitive Ca2+ pool is not the primary target of the suramin induced Ca2+ transient. 4 Furthermore, Ins(1,4,6)PS3, an antagonist of the InsP3-receptor could not suppress the suramin-induced Ca2+ signal. The suramin induced Ca2+ transients declined very slowly; however, in the presence of Ins(1,4,6)PS3 this decay was accelerated. In addition, suramin did not interact with the cADP-ribose binding site of the ryanodine receptor of T-cells. 5 In conclusion, suramin is found to be an agonist for the T-cell ryanodine receptor as previously found for the cardiac and skeletal muscle isoform. Therefore, suramin can be designated a universal ryanodine receptor agonist.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 128

SP - 1235

EP - 1240

JO - BRIT J PHARMACOL

JF - BRIT J PHARMACOL

SN - 0007-1188

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -