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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 2002, 22(16):6891-6899
K+-Dependent Na+/Ca2+
Exchange Is a Major Ca2+ Clearance Mechanism in Axon
Terminals of Rat Neurohypophysis
Suk-Ho
Lee1, *,
Myoung-Hwan
Kim1, *,
Kyeong
Han
Park2,
Yung E.
Earm1, and
Won-Kyung
Ho1
1 Department of Physiology and National Research
Laboratory for Cellular Signaling and 2 Department of
Anatomy, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Chongno-Ku,
Seoul, 110-799, Korea
 |
ABSTRACT |
Two different families of
Na+/Ca2+ exchangers,
K+-independent NCX and
K+-dependent NCKX, are known. Exploiting the outward
K+ gradient, NCKX is able to extrude
Ca2+ more efficiently than NCX, even when the
Na+ gradient is reduced. The NCKX, which was
originally thought to be limited to the retinal photoreceptor, was
shown recently to be widely distributed in the brain. We investigated
the contribution of Na+/Ca2+
exchange to Ca2+ clearance mechanisms in
neurohypophysial (NHP) axon terminals, using patch-clamp and
microfluorometry techniques. In the presence of internal
K+, Ca2+ decay was significantly
slowed by the removal of external Na+, indicative of
the role of Na+/Ca2+ exchange. As
internal [K+] was decreased,
Ca2+ decay rate and its dependence on
Na+ were greatly attenuated. In the absence of
internal K+, Ca2+ decay rate was
little affected by Na+ removal. Quantitative
analysis using Ca2+ decay rate constant indicated
that >60% of Ca2+ extrusion is mediated by
Na+/Ca2+ exchange when peak
[Ca2+] level is higher than 500 nM,
and ~90% of Na+/Ca2+ exchange
activity is K+ dependent. In situ
hybridization confirmed the expression of NCKX2 transcripts in the
supraoptic nucleus in which soma of NHP axon terminals are located. To
our knowledge, this is the first report to show the significant role of
K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+ exchange in neuronal
cells other than photoreceptors. Considering that axon terminals are
subject to an invasion by high-frequency Na+ spikes,
which may lower Na+ gradients, the presence of NCKX
may have a functional significance in intracellular
Ca2+ regulation.
Key words:
neurohypophysis; axon terminal; Ca2+
transient; Na+/Ca2+ exchange; calcium clearance; NCKX
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Calcium is an essential mediator
that couples an invasion of action potentials (APs) with secretory
event in nerve terminals (Lim et al., 1990
).
Ca2+ clearance mechanisms in combination
with Ca2+ influx and cytosolic
Ca2+ buffers are key factors in the
shaping of Ca2+ transients (Lee et al.,
2000
). Although
Na+/Ca2+
exchange and Ca2+-ATPase are thought to be
the two major Ca2+ clearance mechanisms in
axon terminals (Gill et al., 1981
), our knowledge of this is mainly
based on flux studies in synaptosomes derived from the whole brain
(Fontana et al., 1995
). Because synaptosomes are a mixture of axon
terminals in which different kinds of Ca2+
clearance mechanisms are expressed, studies in single axon terminals are required to understand the role of an individual mechanism in
Ca2+ dynamics. Isolated neurohypophysial
(NHP) axon terminals, which were first prepared by Cazalis et al.
(1987)
, can provide a useful model system for this purpose.
Despite the suggestion that
Na+/Ca2+
exchange is important as a Ca2+ clearance
mechanism in synaptosomal preparation, similar study on single axon
terminals is very limited (Stuenkel, 1994
). The role of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in Ca2+ clearance mechanism was
best understood in heart and in rod cells. The rod type exchanger is
distinguished from the cardiac type by its
K+ dependence. Exploiting the outward
K+ gradient,
K+-dependent exchanger was thought to be
able to extrude Ca2+ with relatively
smaller Na+ gradients (Lagnado and
McNaughton, 1989
).
Molecular cloning studies have showed that the two types of exchangers
are encoded by different genes: cardiac type by NCX and rod cell type
by NCKX. Although NCX was known to be distributed abundantly in almost
every tissue, NCKX was originally thought to be limited to the retinal
photoreceptor. Recently, however, a second and a third type of
K+-dependent exchanger (NCKX2 and NCKX3)
were identified in many brain regions (Tsoi et al., 1998
; Kraev et al.,
2001
). In contrast to the recent progress made in the understanding of
K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers at the molecular level, little is known about their actual
function as a Ca2+ clearance mechanism in
real physiological systems other than the photoreceptor.
Here, we present clear evidence that shows the presence and the
functional significance of intracellular
K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers in the axon terminals of the neurohypophysis: >60% of
Ca2+ extrusion is mediated by
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers, and ~90% of
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger activity is K+ dependent.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation of isolated nerve endings from the
neurohypophysis. Axon terminals were isolated from the
neurohypophyses of adult male rats using previously described methods
with small modification (Cazalis et al., 1987
). Pituitary glands were
isolated from male Sprague Dawley rats (11-12 weeks old; 325 ± 25 gm) after killing the animals by CO2
asphyxiation and decapitation. Under the stereomicroscope, neural lobes
were carefully dissected free of the anterior lobe and the pars
intermedia, in bicarbonate buffered solution that had been well aerated
with 95% O2-5% CO2 mixed
gas. A dissected neural lobe was cut into 9 or 12 pieces with a razor
blade in solution containing the following (in
mM): 290 sucrose, 10 HEPES, 10 glucose, and 0.01 K-EGTA. Small pieces of the neural lobe were washed twice with
HEPES-buffered F-10 culture media (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and
kept in this solution at room temperature until next use. Just before
electrophysiological recording, a piece of neural lobe was transferred
to a small recording chamber on the stage of an inverted microscope, in
which the neural lobe piece was triturated in 50-60 µl of culture
medium with fire-polished pipettes (300-500 µm in diameter).
After the isolated nerve endings had settled down on the bottom of the
recording chamber, they appeared rounder and more homogenous than pars
intermedia cells. They were variable in diameters from 5 to 20 µm.
Nerve endings whose diameters are between 12 and 18 µm were chosen
for study.
In early experiments, homogenates were incubated in culture medium
containing Hoechst 33342 (10 µg/ml) for 30 min at room temperature to
differentiate between nerve terminals and melanotrophs and other
nuclei-containing cells. Fluorescence microscopy showed that nerve
endings were not stained with the Hoechst dye, whereas nuclei of
melanotrophs were strongly stained (Fig.
1). After becoming accustomed to the
morphological characteristics of the nerve endings, staining was not
routinely performed. Moreover, we also verified that (1) the nerve
endings had neuronal-like rapidly inactivating TTX-sensitive sodium
currents, and (2) they were capable of exocytosis, as determined by
observing capacitance increments during depolarizing pulses from
80
to 0 mV, using an EPC-9 lock-in module (Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany; data not shown).

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Figure 1.
Photomicrographs of a putative axon terminal
(A) and melanotrophs (B)
stained with Hoechst 33342. A-1 and B-1
were taken while the cells were simultaneously illuminated by
transmitted light from the halogen lamp and by UV excitation light
(370 ± 10 nm) for epifluorescence. A-2 and
B-2 are corresponding epifluorescence images. Scale bar,
10 µm.
|
|
Electrophysiological recordings. Conventional whole-cell
patch-clamp technique was used to evoke calcium current from single axon terminals. Patch pipettes with a resistance of 5-6 M
were constructed from capillary glass, fire polished, and filled with pipette solutions of the following compositions. The K-pipette solution
contained the following (in mM): 110 K-gluconate,
30 KCl, 15 HEPES, 4 MgATP, and 4 Na-ascorbate with the pH adjusted to
7.3 with KOH. To make the
N-methyl-D-glucamine chloride (NMG) pipette solution, K+ in the K pipette
solution was replaced with equimolar NMG+.
The bath solution for the control experiments contained the following
(in mM): 143 NaCl, 5.4 KCl, 0.5 MgCl2, 1.8 CaCl2, 5 HEPES,
and 10 glucose, pH 7.4 (298 ± 2 mOsm). In those experiments in
which the effect of external Na+ was
investigated, the [NaCl] was reduced to 20 mM
by substituting 120 mM NaCl with LiCl or
NMG-Cl.
Currents were recorded using an EPC-9 amplifier. The maintenance of
stable and low basal
[Ca2+]i values in
the patch-clamped nerve terminals required high resistance seals (>10
G
) and very low steady leakage current. Recordings were terminated
when the leakage current exceeded 20 pA. Experiments were performed at
35 ± 1°C.
Cytosolic Ca2+ measurement.
Before cytosolic Ca2+ measurements were
made, the cells were either loaded with fura-2 (pentapotassium salt;
Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) via patch electrodes or
preincubated in culture medium containing 1 µM
fura-2 AM for 10 min. For fluorescence excitation, we used a
monochromator (xenon lamp based; Polychrome-IV; T.I.L.L. Photonics,
Martinsried, Germany), which provided a band (±10 nm) of monochromatic
light. The light source was coupled to the epi-illumination port of an
inverted microscope (Olympus IX70; Olympus Optical, Tokyo, Japan) via a
quartz light guide and a UV condenser. Microfluorometry was performed
with a 40× water immersion objective (numerical aperture of 1.15; UAPO
40×W/340; Olympus Optical) and a photodiode (T.I.L.L.
Photonics). The monochromator was controlled by a CED1401 (Cambridge
Electronics Design, Cambridge UK) and a personal computer running a
custom-made software. A dichroic mirror (DC400LP; AHF Analysentechnik,
Tubingen, Germany) and a long-pass emission filter (515LP; AHF
Analysentechnik) were used for separating emission light from residual
scattered excitation light.
Calibration parameters were determined using the in vivo
calibration method (Neher, 1989
). Briefly,
Rmin was determined by loading nerve
terminals with the standard internal solutions plus 10 mM K-EGTA. Axon terminals could not endure
internal dialysis with high CaCl2 (5 mM). Therefore, we measured the
Rmax value from the pipette solution
containing 5 mM CaCl2 in
vitro. The intermediate fluorescence ratio
(Rint) was measured using cells loaded
with an intracellular solution containing 2.2 mM
K5-BAPTA and 2.8 mM
Ca-BAPTA. The effective dissociation constant
(Keff) of fura was calculated using
the following equation:
|
(1)
|
where [Ca2+] was entered as 288 nM (assuming a dissociation constant
(Kd) of BAPTA of 222 nM at pH 7.2). Estimated
Rmin,
Rmax, and
Keff (in µM)
values were typically 0.27, 3.95, and 0.93, respectively.
We restricted the fluorescence detection area by adjusting the
rectangular aperture stop of the ViewFinder (T.I.L.L Photonics) to the
nerve terminal chosen for patch-clamp recording. The background fluorescence at 340 nm (Fb,340) and
380 nm (Fb,340) was measured in
cell-attached mode, and Fb values were
subtracted from the fluorescence at each corresponding wavelength
measured in whole-cell mode. Fluorescence values after subtraction were
regarded to be the relevant cellular fura-2 fluorescence values.
Fluorescence at the isosbestic wavelength
(Fiso) started to increase and reached
a steady state typically 3-5 min after the establishment of the
whole-cell mode. When Fiso values
became steady, Ca2+ transients were
recorded by detecting fluorescence in response to alternative
illumination of the cell with 340 and 380 nm at 10 Hz. During off-line
analysis, ratios (r = F340/F380)
were converted to [Ca2+] values using
Equation 1.
Calculation of Ca2+ decay rate
constant from a bi-exponential Ca2+
decay. When a Ca2+ extrusion
process follows the Michaelis-Menten equation, the extrusion rate
(dCa(t)/dt) is described as
follows:
|
(2)
|
where
Ca(t) is the magnitude of
Ca2+ excursion from the resting level.
When
Ca(t) is far less than
Km,
dCa(t)/dt could be linearized as
follows:
|
(3)
|
The similar linear Ca2+ extrusion
mechanism was assumed in the "single compartment model" (Helmchen
et al., 1996
; Lee et al., 2000
). Solving Equation 3 for
Ca(t) under the initial condition of the resting
[Ca2+] level
(A0) and the peak amplitude of
Ca2+ transient
(A1) yields the following:
|
(4)
|
or
|
(5)
|
Here, the Ca2+ decay rate constant,
, represents the efficiency of the Ca2+
extrusion process, independent of the magnitude of
Ca2+ excursion level
(
[Ca2+]). From the decay phase of a
Ca2+ transient recorded experimentally,
could also be extracted by dividing its time derivative by
Ca(t) according to Equation 3. In other words,
|
(6)
|
Most of Ca2+ transients in NHP axon
terminals were better described with a bi-exponential curve rather than
a mono-exponential curve (see Fig. 2Aa) as
follows:
|
(7)
|
The single compartment model with linear approximation of
Ca2+ extrusion mechanism is not directly
applicable to a bi-exponential Ca2+
transient, because the "Ca2+ decay rate
constant" is not a constant over its decay phase. Nevertheless,
Ca2+ decay rate constant (
) at a given
[Ca2+]i level
can be obtained using Equation 6, assuming that
is constant within
a narrow range of
[Ca2+]i. The
estimated in this way can be regarded as an "instantaneous Ca2+ decay rate constant." The
at
the start of a bi-exponential Ca2+ decay
(
t=0) can be calculated as follows:
Combining Equation 6 with the following two equations
|
(8)
|
|
(9)
|
yields
|
(10)
|
When
1 and
2
represent the fast and slow rate constants, respectively, the
instantaneous rate constant would start from
t=0, decrease as the
[Ca2+]i level
decays, and finally converge to
2 (see Fig.
2Ab).
Data analysis and statistics. The decay phases of the
Ca2+ transients evoked by single or dual
depolarizing pulses were fitted with exponential equations using
IgorPro (version 4.1; WaveMetrics, Lake Oswego, OR).
Ca2+ decay rate constants obtained from
Ca2+ transients in response to a single
pulse were not statistically different from those in response to dual
pulses protocol, when other conditions were constant. Thus, data
obtained from a single pulse protocol and those from a dual pulse
protocol were pooled for statistical analysis.
Ca2+ decay rate constants were compared
statistically using the Student's t test. Statistical data
are presented as means ± SD, and n indicates the
number of axon terminals studied. Statistical significance was accepted
for p values < 0.01.
Reverse transcription-PCR for mRNA of NCKX isoforms. The
supraoptic nucleus (SON) region of the brain slice (300 µm thick) was punched out under the stereomicroscope using a
custom-made needle (600 µm in diameter). Total RNA was prepared from
the tissue homogenate using RNeasy Mini Kit (Quiagen, Mississauga,
Ontario, Canada) according to the protocol of the supplier. cDNA was
synthesized with a Superscript One-Step RT-PCR System (Invitrogen),
following the protocol of the supplier. A programmable thermal cycler
(Techene, Mancioux, France) was used for PCR reactions. The primers
were used as follows: sense primer, 5'-CACCT CTGAG GAGCA AGTGAC-3' and
antisense primer, 5'-GAAGT AGGTG CCTCT GGGAC-3' for NCKX1; sense
primer, 5'-CTCCA CAAGA TTGCC AAGAA G-3' and antisense primer, 5'-TCCTC
ACTAA TGCCG ATTGTC-3' for NCKX2; sense primer, 5'-GGCAT ATACC AATGG
GGAATC-3' and antisense primer, 3'-GGAAG CAAAC GTCAC CATAAA-3' for
NCKX3. The primer set for NCKX2 and that for NCKX3 are expected to give
PCR products with the size of 466 and 360 bp, respectively.
PCR consisted of an initial denaturation cycle at 95°C for 5 min, and
it was followed by 40 cycles consisting of annealing at 55°C for 1 min, elongation at 72°C for 1 min, and denaturation at 95°C for 1 min. An additional cycle at 72°C for 10 min finished the
amplification process. Amplified PCR products were separated by 1.8%
agarose gel electrophoresis and visualized by ethidium bromide
staining. The labeled bands were sequenced, and their nucleotide
homology with known sequences were identified.
Synthesis of riboprobes for NCKX2 and NCKX3. The PCR product
of NCKX synthesized with the primers mentioned above was used as a cDNA
template for NCKX3. To make the size of riboprobes for NCKX2 similar to
that for NCKX3, reverse transcription (RT)-PCR for NCKX2 transcripts
were performed with the following primers: sense, 5'-CTCCA CAAGA TTGCC
AAGAAG-3'; antisense, 5'-GGGTA AGGTG ATCCA GAGAGG-3'. The size of PCR
products from this primer set is expected to be 332 bp. The PCR
products were inserted into a TA cloning site in a pCR2.1-TOPO vector
containing the reverse sequence of T7 promoter at the 3'-flank region
of the cloning site (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The orientation of
inserted cDNAs was identified by PCR using the specific primers of the
NCKXs and the T7 promoter. The plasmids containing the cDNAs of the NCKXs were purified and then linearized with BamHI.
Riboprobes were synthesized from linearized NCKX2 and NCXK3 cDNA
templates by using T7 RNA polymerase (Promega, Madison, WI) and
digoxigenin-11-UTP (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany).
In situ hybridization. Adult male Sprague Dawley rats
(10-12 weeks old; 300-350 gm) were perfused transcardially with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS, and their brains were removed and embedded in
paraffin. Sections of 10 µm cut in the coronal plane were collected
onto slides. In situ hybridizations for NCKX2 and NCKX3 were
performed essentially according to published accounts (Tsoi et al.,
1998
; Kraev et al., 2001
), using digoxigenin-labeled antisense and
sense riboprobes. Hybridized probe was detected using alkaline
phosphatase-coupled anti-digoxigenin antibody (Boehringer Mannheim)
diluted at the ratio of 1:1000, followed by incubation with 4-nitroblue
tetrazolium chloride/5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-phophate substrate
solution (Boehringer Mannheim).
 |
RESULTS |
We combined a patch-clamp technique and fura-2 fluorescence
microfluorometry to measure the Ca2+ decay
rate in response to a short depolarizing pulse in isolated NHP nerve
endings. Because Ca2+ transients are
affected by the cytosolic concentration of
Ca2+ indicator dye (Lee et al., 2000
), we
waited until fluorescence at the isosbestic wavelength reached a steady
state after establishing the whole-cell mode with a pipette solution
containing 50 µM fura-2. Resting
[Ca2+]i levels
were typically ~100 nM.
Dependence of Ca2+ decay rate constant on
[Ca2+]i
The transient rise in Ca2+ induced by
a depolarizing pulse underwent a spontaneous decay that is considered
to be contributed by Ca2+ clearance
mechanisms. To test whether the Ca2+
extrusion power of the cell, which is represented by
, is dependent on Ca2+ excursion level
(
[Ca2+]), a set of
Ca2+ transients were evoked by
depolarization pulses of various durations (10, 20, 50, 100, and 200 msec) (Fig.
2Aa)
in the same axon terminal. The instantaneous
Ca2+ decay rate (
) at a given
[Ca2+] level was obtained in two
different ways. First, values of
t=0 at
various peak
[Ca2+] levels were
obtained from bi-exponential fits to these five Ca2+ transients using Equation 10 and were
plotted in Figure 2Ab (crosses) as a
function of the peak
[Ca2+]. Second,
instantaneous
values at various
[Ca2+] were calculated according to
Equation 6 from a decay phase of a single
Ca2+ transient. For this calculation, the
time derivatives (
dCa(t)/dt) of the
decay phase of the Ca2+ transient evoked
by 200 msec depolarization were used (Fig. 2Ab, inset). Instantaneous
values were calculated from the
dCa(t)/dt divided by
Ca(t) and plotted against
[Ca2+] in Figure
2Ab (open circles). Figure
2Ab shows that the
values estimated in the two
different ways are well superimposed on each other, indicating that
t=0 at each peak of
Ca2+ transients is equal to the
instantaneous
at the corresponding
[Ca2+] levels. The instantaneous
values, however, were deviated from the
t=0 values near the peak of the
Ca2+ transient. Spatial non-uniformity
might be one of the cause of the deviation. Imaging of
[Ca2+]i change in
a single chromaffin cell (diameter of 15 µm) revealed that it took
~200 msec to achieve spatial uniformity (Neher and Augustine, 1992
).
Before spatial uniformity is achieved, the global [Ca2+] measured with photodiode might be
lower than submembrane [Ca2+], resulting
in underestimation of dCa(t)/dt. From
these results, it can be suggested that
t=0 is the best parameter for the
estimation of the Ca2+ extrusion power
near the peak of the Ca2+ transient,
whereas instantaneous
values obtained from a single Ca2+ transient is useful for analyzing the
[Ca2+] dependence of a
Ca2+ extrusion system.

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Figure 2.
Dependence of the Ca2+ decay
rate constants ( ) on [Ca2+].
Aa, A set of Ca2+ transients evoked
by depolarization pulses of various durations (10, 20, 50, 100, and 200 msec) recorded in the same axon terminal. Inset, The
decay phase of the Ca2+ transient evoked by 200 msec
depolarization pulse was fitted with the following bi-exponential
equation (thin gray line, inset): 0.17 µM · exp ( 0.20t) + 0.56 µM · exp ( 1.01t). Fast and slow
components of the bi-exponential fit are shown (dotted
lines, inset). Calibration: 2 sec, 200 nM. Ab, The time derivative
( d[Ca2+]/dt) of
the decay phase of the Ca2+ transient evoked by 200 msec depolarization (inset) was divided by
[Ca2+](t) to obtain (according to Eq. 6) and plotted as a function of
[Ca2+] (gray open
circles). The t=0 values were
calculated according to Equation 10 from bi-exponential fits to the
five Ca2+ transients shown in Aa. The
following values for fitting parameters
(A1, 1,
A2, and 2 in Eq. 7)
were used: 0.034, 0.043, 0.087, and 0.547 for 10 msec pulse; 0.094, 0.149, 0.131, and 0.839 for 20 msec pulse; 0.154, 0.211, 0.275, and
1.063 for 50 msec pulse; 0.149, 0.226, 0.404, and 1.032 for 100 msec
pulse; and 0.169, 0.200, 0.556, and 1.013 for 200 msec pulse. The
t=0 values obtained from these fitting
parameters were plotted as a function of the peak
[Ca2+] (crosses).
B, Comparison of the Ca2+ decay rate
between two Ca2+ transients with different
amplitudes. Ba, Two Ca2+ transients
recorded from the same cell were superimposed. One trace was evoked by
a single depolarizing pulse of 100 msec duration (black)
and the other one by three depolarizing pulses of the same duration,
200 msec apart (gray). Bb, The two
[Ca2+] traces from
Ba were scaled to the same maximum, and the black
trace was right-shifted along the time axis to superimpose the
two decay phases for direct comparison of the kinetics of the decay
phases. Vertical calibration bar: black trace, 100 nM; gray trace, 160 nM.
|
|
As shown in Figure 2Ab,
increased steeply as
[Ca2+] increased at the lower range,
but at the range of [Ca2+] higher than
500 nM,
remains relatively constant. The
increase in
could be interpreted as a transition of the major
Ca2+ clearance mechanism from a
low-capacity and high-affinity mechanism to a high-capacity and
low-affinity mechanism. The relative independence of
in a higher
[Ca2+] range was further tested in
Figure 2B. The smaller
Ca2+ trace (black trace) in
Figure 2Ba was evoked by a single depolarizing pulse
of 100 msec duration and the other one (gray trace)
by triple depolarizing pulses of the same duration, 200 msec apart
(Fig. 2Bb). Despite the big difference between the
initial amplitudes, the initial decay phases of the two
Ca2+ transients were almost completely
superimposed when each Ca2+ transient was
scaled to the same peak amplitude (Fig. 2B). This result indicates that
t=0 is constant
over a wide range of peak
[Ca2+]i in
which the high-capacity and low-affinity
Ca2+ extrusion mechanism plays a dominant
role in the Ca2+ clearance. Therefore, in
the subsequent experiments, we regarded
t=0 as an estimate for the maximum
Ca2+ extrusion power of the cell when the
peak amplitude of a Ca2+ transient is
higher than 500 nM.
To induce a Ca2+ transient whose peak
amplitude is higher than 500 nM, a depolarizing pulse of
100 msec duration from
60 to 0 mV were applied to axon terminals. The
mean value for peak
[Ca2+]i was
1.03 ± 0.41 µM (n = 39). When the
amplitude of the Ca2+ transient induced by
a single pulse was not within this range, two depolarizing pulses of
100 msec duration were applied 200 msec apart. To minimize variance in
Ca2+ decay rate attributable to
surface-to-volume ratio (Eilers et al., 1995
), we selected nerve
endings with diameters between 12 and 18 µm for the study. No
correlation was found between Ca2+ decay
rates and the diameters of axon terminals that were used in this study.
Na+/Ca2+ exchange is a major
Ca2+ extrusion mechanism in NHP nerve terminals
The effect of Na+ removal on the
Ca2+ decay phase was examined in Figure
3A. With a
K+-rich pipette solution and control bath
solution, most of the Ca2+ decays were
well fitted with bi-exponential curves. The fast and slow time
constants were 0.65 ± 0.12 sec (n = 6) and
9.8 ± 6.2 sec (n = 6), respectively. When
external [Na+] was reduced to 20 mM by the iso-osmotic replacement of
Na+ with Li+,
the decay phase was greatly slowed down. The fast and slow time constants were 1.88 ± 0.23 sec (n = 5) and
9.08 ± 2.23 sec (n = 5), respectively. Similar
results were obtained when NMG+ was used
instead of Li+ for the replacement of
external Na+ (Fig.
4B). These results
indicate that the Ca2+ removal process in
neurohypophysis axon terminals is dependent on external
Na+. Considering that neither
Li+ nor NMG+
can substitute for Na+ in the
Na+/Ca2+
exchange reaction,
Na+/Ca2+
exchange is the most plausible mechanism. To test whether the contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange to the Ca2+ decay rate is
dependent on the cytosolic [Ca2+] level,
time derivatives
(
d[Ca2+]i/dt)
of the decay phases of the two Ca2+ traces
shown in Figure 3A were plotted as a function of
[Ca2+] levels (Fig. 3A,
inset). From this plot, instantaneous
were calculated
using Equation 6 and plotted as a function of
[Ca2+] in Figure 3B. The
difference between the polynomial fit
(fNa) to the
values under
control conditions and that
(fLi) under low
Na+ conditions was considered to be the
contribution made by
Na+/Ca2+
exchange. The relative contribution made by
Na+/Ca2+
exchange (REXC) to the entire
Ca2+ removal mechanism was calculated
according to (fNa
fLi)/fNa and plotted as a function of
[Ca2+]i (Fig.
3B, gray open circles). At low
[Ca2+], the
REXC was almost linearly proportional
to
[Ca2+], but at higher
[Ca2+], it became much less dependent
on
[Ca2+], approaching its maximal
value (66.2%). Analysis of five axon terminals revealed that
REXC values were fairly constant over the range in which
[Ca2+] was higher
than 500 nM. The mean values of maximal
REXC and the
[Ca2+] at half-maximal value of
REXC were 63.3 ± 7.5% and
102.2 ± 44 nM, respectively. The dependence
of REXC on
[Ca2+] is consistent with the present
knowledge that the
Na+/Ca2+
exchange contributes to the low-affinity and high-capacity
Ca2+ extrusion mechanisms, whereas
plasmalemma Ca2+-ATPase contributes to a
subtle control around resting Ca2+ level.
Alternatively, the contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange at the peak
[Ca2+] could be
calculated from the difference between
t=0 values in the control and in the low
[Na+]o condition.
The estimate for
Na
(
t=0 at
[Na+] of 145 mM)
and that for
Li
(
t=0 at
[Na+] of 20 mM)
obtained from the two Ca2+ transients in
Figure 3A were 1.23/sec and 0.43/sec, respectively. The
relative contribution calculated according to the equation (
Na
Li)/
Na was 65%. The
mean value of the relative contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange to the total Ca2+ clearance
mechanism, averaged from five cells, was 64.3 ± 3.7%, which is
fairly close to the mean value of the maximal
REXC.

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Figure 3.
Effect of external Na+
reduction on the decay phase of Ca2+ transients.
A, Two Ca2+ transients from the same
cell were superimposed. The traces indicated with NaCl
and LiCl were obtained in normal Tyrode's solution (145 mM
[Na+]o) and in low
Na+ condition (20 mM
[Na+]o and 125 mM
[Li+]o), respectively. The K
pipette solution (for its composition, see Materials and Methods)
containing 50 µM fura-2 was used for the internal
solution. Calibration: 2 sec, 200 nM. The decay phases of
the traces indicated with NaCl and LiCl were fitted with
the following bi-exponential equations: 0.20 µM · exp
( 0.19t) + 1.18 µM · exp
( 1.42t) and 0.19 µM · exp( 0.13t) + 1.02 µM · exp( 0.48t), respectively. Inset, The
plot of the time derivatives
( d[Ca2+]/dt) of
the decay phases of the two Ca2+ transients as a
function of [Ca2+]i (white
dots, NaCl; black dots, LiCl). B,
The instantaneous values at various [Ca2+]
were calculated by dividing the time derivatives (inset
in A) by
[Ca2+](t) and were fitted
with fourth-order polynomial functions
(fNa, a fit to in the
normal condition; fLi, a fit to in the low [Na+]o condition). The
difference between the two polynomial fits was plotted as a
solid line (marked by
fNa fLi). The fraction of inhibited
by the reduction of [Na+]o,
(fNa fLi)/fNa,
was plotted as gray open circles (the right
ordinate).
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Figure 4.
[K+]i dependence
of Ca2+ decay rate. A, Representative
Ca2+ transients recorded with a
K+ pipette (left) and with an
NMG+ pipette (right). A
Ca2+ transient recorded at 145 mM
[Na+]o (black traces)
and that recorded at 20 mM
[Na+]o (gray
traces; Na+ was replaced by
Li+) were superimposed. B, Mean
Ca2+ decay rate constants
( t=0) of Ca2+
transients under conditions indicated below the
abscissa. Subscript o and
i represent external and internal major cations,
respectively.
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Na+/Ca2+ exchange is
dependent on internal K+
The expression of NCKX in various regions of the brain other than
photoreceptor cells was reported recently (Tsoi et al., 1998
; Kraev et
al., 2001
), but functional studies in native tissues have not yet been
reported. To test the possible involvement of K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger in Ca2+ decay in axon terminals,
we recorded the Ca2+ transient using a
K+-free pipette solution. When internal
K+ was replaced with
NMG+, the decay rate of the
Ca2+ transient was significantly slower
(
Na = 0.44 ± 0.13/sec; p < 0.01) than that obtained with a K+
pipette and was not statistically different from
Li obtained with a
K+ pipette (0.49 ± 0.08/sec;
p > 0.05). Furthermore, the inhibitory effect of
lowering [Na+]o on
Ca2+ decay, which was clearly observed
with the K+ pipette, was negligible or
markedly reduced under NMG+ pipette
conditions (Fig. 4). These results show that the
Na+/Ca2+
exchange reaction hardly functions in the absence of intracellular K+, which suggests the function of
K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger in NHP axon terminals.
To quantify the dependence of the
Na+/Ca2+
exchange reaction on cytosolic [K+], we
measured the Ca2+ decay rate exerted by
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger at various
[K+]i, which were
attained by intracellular dialysis using pipette solutions in which
K+ were replaced iso-osmotically with
various concentration of NMG+. The
Ca2+ decay rate constant exerted by
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger was calculated from the difference between
Na and
Li. Mean
values of the difference between
Na and
Li (denoted by
Na
Li
hereafter) were plotted as a function of cytosolic [K+] in Figure
5. The relationship between
Na
Li and cytosolic [K+] was hyperbolic. The solid
line represents the best fit to the Michaelis-Menten equation,
which revealed that a Km value is 30.3 mM.

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Figure 5.
Dependence of
Na+/Ca2+ exchange on
intracellular [K+]. Activity of
Na+/Ca2+ exchange was estimated
from the difference ( Na Li) between the
Ca2+ decay rate at 145 mM
[Na+]o ( Na) and
the decay rate ( Li) at 20 mM
[Na+]o (Na+ was
replaced with iso-osmolar Li+). Mean values of
Na Li obtained from n axon terminals
were plotted as a function of [K+]i
(error bars indicate SEM). The internal K+
dependence of Na Li was fitted using the following
Michaelis-Menten equation (solid line): 0.07/sec + (0.90/sec · [K+]i)/([K+]i + 30.3 mM).
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Although the Na+-dependent
Ca2+ extrusion was significantly
attenuated under the condition of internal
NMG+, the effect of
Na+ removal on the
Ca2+ decay rate was not completely
abolished in some cells. On average,
Na
Li
estimated using the NMG+ pipette
([K+]i of 0.25 mM, because 50 µM
K5-fura-2 was included in the pipette solutions) was 0.088/sec, which is 11.3% of that estimated with K+ pipette (0.773/sec), indicating that
~90% of the Na/Ca exchange mechanism is dependent on cytosolic
K+.
External K+ dependence of reverse
Na+/Ca2+ exchange
In previous studies on the K+
dependence of NCKX expressed in cultured cells (Tsoi et al., 1998
;
Kraev et al., 2001
), they observed the dependence of the reverse-mode
Na+/Ca2+
exchange on external [K+]. In Figure
6, we investigated whether
Ca2+ influx can be induced through the
reverse mode of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in NHP axon terminals and its dependence on
[K+]o.

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Figure 6.
The effect of external K+ on
reverse-mode Na+/Ca2+ exchange.
A, B, The Ca2+
traces were recorded from two different axon terminals
preloaded with fura-2 AM. The times when 0.5 mM ouabain was
applied are indicated by arrows. The two
bars underneath the Ca2+
traces illustrate the sequence of changes in
[Na+] and [K+] of the
external bathing solutions. External Na+ was
replaced with equimolar NMG+ in zero
Na+ solutions. K+ was added or
omitted to the normal Tyrode's solution to make 10 mM
[K+]o or zero
[K+]o. C, Average
[Ca2+]i increases during initial 30 sec after the solution change under various ionic conditions
(n, number of individual nerve endings; error bars
indicate SEMs). Numbers below the
abscissa indicate external concentrations of
K+. The major external cation was
Na+ (left three bars, 145 mM Na+) or NMG+
(right three bars, zero Na+).
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Accordingly, we monitored
[Ca2+]i of axon
terminals preincubated in 1 µM fura-2 AM and used low
[Ca2+]o (0.1 mM) in all of the external solutions to prevent
[Ca2+]i from
increasing to the toxic level. To evoke
Ca2+ influx via the reverse-mode
Na+/Ca2+
exchange, we loaded axon terminals with
Na+ by superfusing them with normal
Tyrode's solution containing 0.5 mM ouabain (Figs.
5A,B). While superfusing them with
0.5 mM ouabain,
[Ca2+]i increased
slowly. Initial rates of [Ca2+] increase
were highly variable, ranging from 3 to 40 nM/min, but, in most cells,
[Ca2+]i reached a
steady state in 5 min. This result implies that increase in
[Na+]i
attributable to a blockade of the Na+ pump
induces the accumulation of intracellular
Ca2+ via an
Na+/Ca2+
exchange mechanism. Additional increase in
[Ca2+]i was
expected on the removal of external Na+,
which leads to an increase in the driving force for the reverse mode of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange. In the absence of external K+,
however, replacement of external Na+ with
equimolar NMG+ resulted in a slight or no
[Ca2+]i increase.
In contrast, external Na+ replacement
invariably caused a rapid Ca2+ increase in
the presence of 5.4 mM
K+ or 10 mM
K+ in the bath solution (Fig.
6A). To exclude the possibility that the
[Ca2+]i increase
during the addition of K+ to the
Na+-free solution was caused by
Ca2+ channel activation attributable to
depolarization, we tested whether
[Ca2+]i increases
during the addition of 10 mM
K+ to the bath solution while
[Na+]o was kept
normal (Fig. 6B). The increase in
[Ca2+]i during the
addition of 10 mM K+
in normal [Na+]o
condition was far less than in the
Na+-free condition
(p < 0.01), and, in the same cell, a remarkable increase in
[Ca2+]i was
induced by the subsequent removal of external
Na+ (Fig. 6B). This
result further supports that the external
K+-dependent
[Ca2+]i increase
was attributable to the reverse mode of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange. To compare
[Ca2+]i increase
rates in various ionic compositions, we measured the mean increase in
[Ca2+]i during the
initial 30 sec after the solution change and plotted it in Figure
6C. It shows that
[Ca2+]i increase
rates are more greatly affected by external
K+ in the
Na+-free condition than in the normal
[Na+] condition.
Expression of mRNA of NCKX isoforms in the supraoptic nucleus and
paraventricular nucleus
Soma of axon terminals of NHP are located in the SON and the
paraventricular nucleus (PVN). The expression of NCKX isoforms in those
brain regions was determined at the mRNA level.
Total RNAs of supraoptic nucleus were extracted, and RT-PCR
amplification was performed using specific sets of primers for NCKX1,
NCKX2, and NCKX3 (see Materials and Methods). Each set of
oligonucleotides used for RT-PCR amplification of NCKX2 and NCKX3
transcripts yielded the PCR products of the expected size (466 bp for
NCKX2 and 360 bp for NCKX3) (Fig.
7A), whereas no PCR product
was detected for NCKX1 (data not shown).

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Figure 7.
The expression of NCKX transcripts revealed by
RT-PCR (A) and in situ
hybridization (B). A, Total RNAs
were extracted from rat brain SON and reverse-transcribed
[RT(+)] using reverse transcriptase plus taq
polymerase PCR amplification of cDNAs was performed using a specific
set of primers for NCKX2 and NCKX3. RT-PCR demonstrates expression of
mRNA for NCKX2 and NCKX3 in SON. DNA contamination was tested from the
absence of PCR product without reverse transcriptase
[RT( )]. B, C,
In situ hybridization using digoxigenin-labeled NCKX2
(B) and NCKX3 (C) antisense
riboprobes was performed on the coronal sections of the rat brain. In
all cases, the sense control resulted in no increase in contrast above
the general background observed in the panels of this figure.
Ba, SON; Bb, PVN; Ca, SON;
Cb, thalamus (Thal). The regions
corresponding to the optic tract (OT) and the
third ventricle (III) are marked in
Ba and Bb, respectively. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Tissue distribution of NCKX2 and NCKX3 transcripts was determined using
in situ hybridization. NCKX2 expression was evident in both
the supraoptic nucleus and paraventricular nucleus (Fig. 7B), whereas NCKX3 was scarcely detected in the SON (Fig.
7Ca) and not detected at all in the PVN (data not shown).
NCKX3 transcripts, however, were abundant in thalamus (Fig.
7Cb) and in layer IV of neocortex (data not shown).
Distribution patterns of NCKX2 and NCKX3 transcripts in other brain
regions were essentially the same as previous reports (Tsoi et al.,
1998
; Kraev et al., 2001
).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Plasma membrane
Na+/Ca2+
exchangers have been extensively studied in various cell systems. Two
families of
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger proteins have been described in mammalian tissues: cardiac
type Na+/Ca2+
exchanger and the K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger, which is principally expressed in retinal rod outer segments. Three different genes for cardiac type exchanger (NCX1, NCX2,
and NCX3) have been described, and it is now known that they are also
found in various tissues other than the heart, such as the brain,
kidney, and smooth and skeletal muscles. In contrast, the tissue
distribution of the K+-dependent exchanger
NCKX1 was originally thought to be limited to the retinal
photoreceptor. Subsequently, however, a second type of
K+-dependent exchanger (NCKX2) was cloned
from rat brain and shown to be expressed in many other brain regions
(Tsoi et al., 1998
). Moreover, a third type of
K+-dependent exchanger (NCKX3), which was
cloned recently, shows a wide tissue distribution. It is most abundant
in the brain and at a lower level in the aorta, uterus, and intestine,
which are rich in smooth muscle (Kraev et al., 2001
). Accordingly, it
is now believed that this class of Ca2+
transporter is widely distributed over the brain.
The present study demonstrates that (1)
Na+/Ca2+
exchange is the most important mechanism of
Ca2+ clearance in the rat NHP axon
terminals when
[Ca2+] is higher than
500 nM, and (2) ~90% of the extrusion of intracellular Ca2+ via
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger is dependent on intracellular
[K+]. To our knowledge, this is the
first report to show that K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger plays a physiologically significant role in the
Ca2+ dynamics of native neuronal cells
other than in the cones and rods of the retina. Considering that
Ca2+ handling mechanisms in a specific
neuron are not uniform but different in soma, dendrite, and axon
(Mironov et al., 1993
), it remains to be elucidated whether the
distribution of NCKX is polarized in a neuron.
Relative contribution of
Na+/Ca2+ exchange to
Ca2+ clearance
Quantitative studies on Ca2+
clearance mechanisms in neuronal cells are very limited. The
contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger reported in the present study in NHP axon terminals is far
greater than that any previous study in the brain, and it is strikingly
different from a previous study in the same preparation by Stuenkel
(1994)
. He observed that a reduction of
[Na+]o has little
effect on the Ca2+ transient and concluded
that Na+/Ca2+
exchange has no contribution to Ca2+
clearance. Stuenkel, however, used NMG+ in
the pipette solution instead of K+, and we
now understand, based on the results of the present study, the reason
why the contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchange was very small in his experimental condition. Our estimate for
the contribution of
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger is also greater than that of Fierro et al. (1998)
, who used a
similar approach to ours in rat cerebellar Purkinje cell soma and
reported that
Na+/Ca2+
exchange account for 26% at 0.5 µM
Ca2+ and 18% at 2 µM
Ca2+ of total
Ca2+ clearance. It should be noted,
however, that their estimates were obtained from experiments performed
with Cs+ pipettes. In light of the results
of the present study together with other evidence showing that NCKX2 is
expressed in cerebellar Purkinje neurons as well as other brain regions
(Tsoi et al., 1998
), it might be necessary to reevaluate the
contribution of Na+/Ca2+
exchange to Ca2+ clearance when
K+ is present in the pipette solution.
Mechanism of the K+ dependence of
Na+/Ca2+ exchange
There are two ways in which K+
affects Na+ gradient-dependent
Ca2+ efflux: (1)
K+ is cotransported with
Ca2+, as suggested for rod-type NCKX and
NCKX2 (Cervetto et al., 1989
; Dong et al., 2001
), or 2)
K+ modulates the activity of the exchange
protein without being transported (Blaustein, 1977
; Slaughter et al.,
1983
; DiPolo and Rojas, 1984
). The latter mechanism has been documented
in the squid axon but not in mammalian NCX. The involvement of
monovalent cations in
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in the squid axon is not fully understood and thus remains controversial. When internal K+ is
replaced with TMA+ in the squid
axon,
Ca2+/Ca2+
exchange is markedly reduced, but
Na+o-dependent
Ca2+i efflux is inhibited
only slightly (Blaustein, 1977
). On the contrary, a subsequent study
reported that Tris+ substitute for
internal K+ causes marked inhibition in
Na+o-dependent
Ca2+ efflux in the squid axon (DiPolo and
Rojas, 1984
). Recently squid Na+/Ca2+
exchanger (NCX-SQ1) was cloned, but it is not clear whether a similar
molecular entity exists in mammalian (He et al., 1998
). In cardiac
sarcolemmal vesicles, in which existence of NCX1 has been firmly
established, monovalent cations stimulated
Ca2+/Ca2+
exchange, but they did not stimulate
Na+/Ca2+
exchange when they were present on the same side of the membrane as
Ca2+ (Slaughter et al., 1983
). Comparable
data for brain-type NCX (NCX2 and NCX3) are not available, and, thus,
at present, we cannot entirely exclude the possibility that they may
have a dependence on K+ or other
monovalent cations. However, considering the functional similarities
within the mammalian NCX family (Linck et al., 1998
), this possibility
is not considered very likely. More importantly, the
K+ dependence shown in the present study
has features that are similar to the known characteristics of NCKX (for
details, see the section below). Therefore, we think that NCKX is a
more plausible candidate Na+/Ca2+
exchanger molecule in NHP axon terminals, although we were not able to
directly clarify whether K+ is
cotransported with Ca2+ during the
Ca2+ extrusion process via
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in NHP axon terminals.
Comparison of the K+ dependence of
Na+/Ca2+ exchange with other
studies
In the present study, the apparent dissociation constant
(Km) for intracellular
K+ was measured in
Ca2+ efflux mode, which is more
physiologically relevant to the shaping of the
Ca2+ transient. In the majority of the
previous studies providing quantitative information, the
Km value for extracellular
K+ was determined using the reverse
Ca2+ entry mode. Furthermore, the
Km value is known to be affected by
other cations present on the side of
K+-binding site (Prinsen et al., 2000
;
Dong et al., 2001
). Figure 6 shows that the
Ca2+ influx mode requires extracellular
K+
(K+o), but we were not
able to measure Km for extracellular K+ attributable to the limitation in the
range of [K+]o
that could be changed experimentally without imposing other effects on
the cells. Thus, direct comparison of
Km values
(K+ dependence) in this study with those
in other studies might be misleading. Nevertheless, it may be
worthwhile comparing the Km value with
those in other studies, if we can assume that internal K+ dependence is not substantially
different from external K+ dependence.
Km for the external
K+ of the outward NCKX1 current in rod
cells was 150 µM (Perry and McNaughton, 1993
).
In platelets in which rod-type NCKX1 is thought to be present, it was
~1 mM (Kimura et al., 1999
). Previous studies
on Na+/Ca2+
exchange in the synaptic plasma membrane vesicles of rat brain reported
that K+ stimulates
Na+ gradient-dependent
Ca2+ influx and that the
K+ effect is saturated at 2 mM (Dahan et al., 1991
). These values are
considerably different from the value observed in the present study
(Km of 30 mM).
Recently, it was reported that Km for
the external K+ of the outward NCKX2
current is substantially higher than that of the rod-type NCKX1. Dong
et al. (2001)
reported that the Km value estimated from NCKX2 expressed in human embryonic kidney cells
was reported to be 12 mM when choline was a major
cationic component of the extracellular side and that
Km value of NCKX2 was even larger (36 mM) when Li+ instead
of choline was used. Based on the proximities of the Km value in this study to the values
reported by Dong et al. (2001)
, we think that NCKX2 is the most
plausible
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger candidate in the NHP axon terminal among the NCKX family cloned so far. This conclusion is further supported by the results of
in situ hybridization that indicate that the expression of NCKX2 transcripts was clearly more abundant than that of NCKX3 (Fig.
7B).
Physiological implication
The results of the present study indicate that
Na+/Ca2+
exchange is a dominant Ca2+ extrusion
mechanism when
[Ca2+] level is higher
than 500 nM. The mean amplitude of
Ca2+ transient evoked by a single action
potential in current-clamp mode was ~30 nM (data not
shown). The results shown in Figures 2 and 3 imply that, at this level,
high-capacity Ca2+ extrusion system is not
yet operating and thus
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger plays little role in Ca2+
clearance. It is generally accepted, however, that secretion of
oxytocin and vasopressin from neurohypophysis nerve terminals is evoked
most effectively by bursts of APs rather than by a single AP (Cazalis
et al., 1985
). The mean intraburst AP frequency observed in vivo is known as 13 Hz for vasopressin-containing neurons
and 24 Hz for oxytocin-containing neurons (Cazalis et al., 1985
). When
we mimicked the burst spikes by applying a train of 70 short depolarization pulses (3 msec duration) at the frequency of 10 Hz to
the axon terminals in voltage-clamp mode, we observed that [Ca2+]i gradually
increased and reached a steady value of ~800
nM. This level is not substantially different
from the amplitude of Ca2+ transient
evoked by a 100 msec depolarization pulse used in the present study.
Thus,
Na+/Ca2+
exchanger might play a dominant role in
Ca2+ clearance when an NHP axon terminal
is invaded by a train of APs, which is physiologically more relevant to
the secretion.
The results of Km value for internal
K+ and those of in situ
hybridization suggest that NCKX2 (more likely) and/or NCKX3 might be
responsible for the K+-dependent
Na+/Ca2+
exchange in NHP axon terminals. It seems to be clear that
K+ is cotransported via NCKX2, because
ionic current via NCKX2 is proportional to the transmembrane
electrochemical gradient of K+, which was
demonstrated in the cells in which NCKX was artificially expressed
(Dong et al., 2001
). The stoichiometry of NCKX, 4 Na+:1 Ca2+,1
K+, enables the exchanger to attain a much
lower level of
[Ca2+]i than NCX
whose exchange ratio is 3 Na+:1
Ca2+ (Cervetto et al., 1989
). Thus, the
presence of NCKX reflects a need to extrude
Ca2+ rapidly with relatively smaller
sodium gradients. Both rod cells and platelets, in which role of NCKX
in Ca2+ extrusion was demonstrated, are
considered to have such needs (Lagnado and McNaughton, 1989
; Kimura et
al., 1993
). In rod cells, opening of the cGMP-gated channels in the
dark results in membrane depolarization and increase in both
[Na+]i and
[Ca2+]i. Under
these unusual ionic conditions, NCKX can extrude
Ca2+ by coupling
Ca2+ movements to both
Na+ and K+
gradients. It remains to be elucidated whether there is such demand in
NHP axon terminals. It is expected that intracellular [Na+] might increase during AP bursts
and that smaller axon terminals would be more vulnerable to
[Na+]i increase
attributable to high surface-to-volume ratio. Harnessing of
K+ gradient in
Na+/Ca2+
exchange would prevent
Na+/Ca2+
exchange from attenuation of its Ca2+
extrusion activity, when Na+ gradient is
reduced. Moreover, the [Ca2+] level at
which the flux through NCKX is reversed is supposed to be much lower
than NCX. In other words, NCKX would provide a cell with a
high-capacity Ca2+ extrusion mechanism
that is able to operate in the relatively lower
Ca2+ range than NCX. Information about
relative contributions of neuron-type NCX to
Ca2+ clearance at various
[Ca2+] is not available in neuronal
cells. The dependence of relative contribution of NCX on
[Ca2+] needs to be investigated in
future studies.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 22, 2002; revised May 30, 2002; accepted June 3, 2002.
*
S.H.L. and M.H.K. contributed equally to this work
This work was supported by Ministry of Health and Welfare Grant
01-PJ1-PG1-10CH06-003. M.H.K. is a postgraduate student supported by
Program BK21 from the Ministry of Education. We thank Dr. Y. S. Chun and Dr. J. W. Park for the synthesis of cDNA templates for
in vitro transcription.
Correspondence should be addressed to Won-Kyung Ho, Department of
Physiology and National Research Laboratory for Cellular Signaling,
Seoul National University College of Medicine, 28 Yongon-Dong, Chongno-Ku, Seoul, 110-799, Korea. E-mail: wonkyung{at}snu.ac.kr.
 |
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