Synergistic signals in the mechanism of antigen-induced exocytosis in 2H3 cells: evidence for an unidentified signal required for histamine release.
Open Access
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 105 (3) , 1129-1136
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.105.3.1129
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether the increase in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in response to antigen (aggregated ovalbumin) on IgE-primed 2H3 cells was sufficient to account for exocytosis. When the [Ca2+]i responses to antigen and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 were compared, A23187 was much less effective at releasing histamine at equivalent [Ca2+]i increases, and little or no stimulated histamine release occurred with A23187 concentrations that matched the [Ca2+]i response to antigen concentrations that stimulated maximal histamine release. The [Ca2+]i response to antigen is not, therefore, sufficient to account for exocytosis, although extracellular Ca2+ is necessary to initiate both the [Ca2+]i response and histamine release: the antigen must generate an additional, unidentified, signal that is required for exocytosis. To determine whether this signal was the activation of protein kinase C, the effects of the phorbol ester 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) on the responses to antigen were examined. TPA blocked the antigen-induced [Ca2+]i response and the release of inositol phosphates but had little effect on histamine release and did not stimulate exocytosis by itself. The unidentified signal from the antigen is therefore distinct from the activation of protein kinase C and is generated independently of the [Ca2+]i response or the release of inositol phosphates. Taken together with other data that imply that there is very little activation of protein kinase C by antigen when the rate of histamine release is maximal, it is concluded that the normal exocytotic response to antigen requires the synergistic action of the [Ca2+]i signal together with an unidentified signal that is not mediated by protein kinase C.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Loss of quin 2 accompanies degranulation of mast cellsFEBS Letters, 1986
- Quantitative analysis of the cytosolic free calcium dependency of exocytosis from three subcellular compartments in intact human neutrophils.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Potentiation and inhibition of secretion from neutrophils by phorbol esterFEBS Letters, 1986
- Two roles for guanine nucleotides in the stimulus-secretion sequence of neutrophilsNature, 1986
- The Ca signal from fura‐2 loaded mast cells depends strongly on the method of dye‐loadingFEBS Letters, 1985
- Guanine nucleotides and Ca‐dependent exocytosisFEBS Letters, 1985
- Protein kinase C regulation of the receptor-coupled calcium signal in histamine-secreting rat basophilic leukaemia cellsNature, 1985
- Involvement of guanine nucleotide-binding protein in the gating of Ca2+ by receptorsNature, 1983
- The phorbol ester TPA increases the affinity of exocytosis for calcium in ‘leaky’ adrenal medullary cellsFEBS Letters, 1983
- Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate activates rabbit neutrophils without an apparent rise in the level of intracellular free calciumBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1983