Terbutaline-induced triphasic changes in volume of rat alveolar type II cells: the role of cAMP |
| |
Authors: | Hosoi Keita Min Kyong-Yob Shiima Chisa Hanafusa Toshiaki Mori Hiroshi Nakahari Takashi |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Internal Medicine, Osaka Medical College, Takatsuki, 569-8686 Japan. |
| |
Abstract: | Changes in the volume of rat alveolar type II cells (AT-II cells) induced by terbutaline, a beta(2)-agonist, were measured using video-enhanced contrast microscopy. The changes consisted of three phases: initial cell shrinkage, cell swelling, and gradual cell shrinkage. The initial cell shrinkage was Ca(2+)-dependent and was inhibited by quinine (a K+ channel blocker). The subsequent cell swelling was cAMP-dependent and was inhibited by amiloride (a Na+ channel blocker). The final cell shrinkage was cAMP-dependent and was inhibited by 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoate (NPPB, a Cl- channel blocker). Thus, terbutaline-induced cell volume changes were regulated by both Ca2+ and cAMP. Accumulation of cAMP alone, however, induced the Ca2+ -dependent cell shrinkage of AT-II cells and H-89 (a PKA inhibitor) inhibited terbutaline-induced cell volume changes. This suggests that cAMP accumulation stimulates the Ca2+ signal during terbutaline stimulation. In conclusion, terbutaline stimulates not only Na+ influx, but also K+ and Cl- release mediated via cAMP accumulation in rat AT-II cells, which induces the triphasic cell volume changes. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|