O2-Sensing Mechanisms in Excitable Cells: Role of Plasma Membrane K+ Channels
- 1 October 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Physiology
- Vol. 59 (1) , 23-42
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.physiol.59.1.23
Abstract
Although carotid chemosensitive glomus cells have been the most extensively studied from the vantage point of how cells sense the lack of O2, it is clear that all tissues sense O2 deprivation. In addition, all mammalian cells can trigger a cascade of events that, depending on the severity and duration of hypoxia-induced stress, can lead to permanent injury and death or to adaptation and survival. Crucial in this cascade, we believe, how the cascade is initiated, how O2 lack is detected by cells, and how these initial steps can activate further processes. In this chapter, we focus on the initial steps of O2 sensing in tissues most commonly studied, i.e. carotid glomus cells, central neurons, smooth muscle cells, and neuro-epithelial bodies of the airways. Recently it has become clear that plasma membranes of various tissues can sense the lack of O2, not only indirectly via alterations in the intracellular milieu (such as pH, Ca, ATP, etc), but also directly through an unknown mechanism that involves plasma-membrane K channels and possibly other membrane proteins. This latter mechanism is suspected to be totally independent of cytosolic changes because excised patches from plasma membranes were used in these experiments from carotid cells and neurons. There are a number of questions in this exciting area of research that pertain to the role of this plasma-membrane O2-sensing mechanism in the overall cell response, identification of all the important steps in O2 sensing, differences between O2-tolerant and O2-susceptible cells, and differences between acute and chronic cell responses to lack of O2.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oxygen sensing by ion channels and chemotransduction in single glomus cells.The Journal of general physiology, 1996
- The extracellular calcium receptorCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1995
- Does Catecholamine Secretion Mediate the Hypoxia-lnduced Increase in Nerve Activity?Neurosignals, 1995
- Functional expression of the parathyroid cell calcium receptor inXenopusoocytesFEBS Letters, 1993
- Human neocortical excitability is decreased during anoxia via sodium channel modulation.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993
- Potassium channel types in arterial chemoreceptor cells and their selective modulation by oxygen.The Journal of general physiology, 1992
- Oxygen and acid chemoreception in the carotid body chemoreceptorsTrends in Neurosciences, 1992
- Antidiabetic sulfonylureas: localization of binding sites in the brain and effects on the hyperpolarization induced by anoxia in hippocampal slicesBrain Research, 1989
- Chemotransduction in the Carotid Body: K + Current Modulated by P O 2 In Type I Chemoreceptor CellsScience, 1988
- The ventilatory response to hypoxia in the newborn lamb after carotid body denervationRespiration Physiology, 1985