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 Modulation of the epithelial calcium channel, ECaC, by intracellular Ca2+ Nilius B; Prenen J; Vennekens R; Hoenderop JG; Bindels RJ; Droogmans GCell Calcium  2001[Jun]; 29 (6): 417-28We have studied the modulation by intracellular Ca2+ of the epithelial Ca2+  channel, ECaC, heterologously expressed in HEK 293 cells. Whole-cell and  inside-out patch clamp current recordings were combined with FuraII-Ca2+  measurements:1. Currents through ECaC were dramatically inhibited if Ca2+ was the  charge carrier. This inhibition was dependent on the extracellular Ca2+  concentration and occurred also in cells buffered intracellularly with 10 mM  BAPTA.2. Application of 30 mM [Ca(2)]e induced in non-Ca2+] buffered HEK 293  cells at -80 m V an increase in intracellular Ca2+([Ca2]i) with a maximum rate of  rise of 241 +/-15nM/s (n= 18 cells) and a peak value of 891 +/- 106 nM. The peak  of the concomitant current with a density of 12.3 +/- 2.6 pA/pF was closely  correlated with the peak of the first-time derivative of the Ca2+ transient, as  expected if the Ca2+ transient is due to influx of Ca2+. Consequently, no Ca2+]  signal was observed in cells transfected with the Ca2+ impermeable ECaC mutant,  D542A, in which an aspartate in the pore region was neutralized.3. Increasing  [Ca2+]i by dialyzing the cell with pipette solutions containing various Ca2+]  concentrations, all buffered with 10 mM BAPTA, inhibited currents through ECaC  carried by either Na+ or Ca2+] ions. Half maximal inhibition of Ca(2+)currents in  the absence of monovalent cations occurred at 67 nM (n between 6 and 8), whereas  Na+ currents in the absence of Ca2+] and Mg2+ were inhibited with an IC50 of 89  nM (n between 6 and 10). Currents through ECaC in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+ and  Na+, which are mainly carried by Ca2+, are inhibited by [Ca2]i with an IC50of 82  nM (n between 6 and 8). Monovalent cation currents through the Ca2+impermeable  D542A ECaC mutant were also inhibited by an elevation of [Ca2]i (IC50 = 123 nM, n  between 7 and 18). 4. The sensitivity of ECaC currents in inside-out patches for  [Ca2]i was slightly shifted to higher concentrations as compared with whole cell  measurements. Half-maximal inhibition occurred at 169 nM if Na+ was the charge  carrier (n between 4 and 11) and 228 nM at 1 mM [Ca2]e (n between 4 and 8).5.  Recovery from inhibition upon washout of extracellular Ca2+ (whole-cell  configuration) or removal of Ca2+ from the inner side of the channel (inside-out  patches) was slow in both conditions. Half-maximal recovery was reached after 96  +/- 34 s (n= 15) in whole-cell mode and after 135 +/- 23 s (n = 17) in inside-out  patches.6. We conclude that influx of Ca2+ through ECaC and [Ca2]i induce  feedback inhibition of ECaC currents, which is controlled by the concentration of  Ca2+ in a micro domain near the inner mouth of the channel. Slow recovery seems  to depend on dissociation of Ca( 2+ from an internal Ca2+ binding site at ECaC.|Calcium Channels/drug effects/*metabolism[MESH]|Calcium/chemistry/*metabolism/pharmacology[MESH]|Cells, Cultured[MESH]|Dialysis/methods[MESH]|Electrophysiology[MESH]|Epithelial Cells/*metabolism[MESH]|Extracellular Space/chemistry[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Intracellular Fluid/chemistry[MESH]|Membrane Potentials/drug effects/physiology[MESH]|Patch-Clamp Techniques[MESH]|TRPV Cation Channels[MESH]
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