Duration of the calcium signal in the mitogenic stimulation of thymocytes
- 15 August 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 214 (2) , 575-579
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2140575
Abstract
An increase in the free cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration in thymocytes can be detected by the fluorescent indicator quin 2 within a few seconds of the addition of concanavalin A and the response is quantified from the increased proportion of quin 2 in the cells chelated by Ca2+ (‘% Ca-quin 2’). The % Ca-quin 2 in untreated cells is 53 +/- 6%, increases to 64 +/- 7% immediately after the addition of concanavalin A and declines spontaneously over 24 h back to the level in untreated cells (53 +/- 6%). The increase in % Ca-quin 2 in response to concanavalin A is completely blocked when 50 mM-alpha-methyl D-mannoside is added before concanavalin A and completely reversed when the competing sugar is added immediately after the mitogen. Addition of alpha-methyl D-mannoside at increasing intervals after concanavalin A addition causes a progressively smaller decrease in % Ca-quin 2 and has a negligible effect after 24 h, when the % Ca-quin 2 is the same as that in untreated cells. The decline in the calcium signal defined by these experiments has a similar time course to cap formation by concanavalin A on the cells. It is concluded that the calcium signal lasts only while concanavalin A is bound to the cell surface and is terminated either by capping or by the addition of alpha-methyl D-mannoside.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Free cytoplasmic calcium concentration and the mitogenic stimulation of lymphocytes.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1983
- T-cell mitogens cause early changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ and membrane potential in lymphocytesNature, 1982
- Mitogenic stimulation and the redistribution of concanavalin A receptors on lymphocytesExperimental Cell Research, 1981
- Two distinct factors are required for induction of T-cell growthNature, 1980
- A calcium hypothesis for the control of cell growth.1980
- Ligand-dependent modulation of membrane phospholipid metabolism in ConA-stimulated lymphocytesExperimental Cell Research, 1978
- Analysis of the stimulation-inhibition paradox exhibited by lymphocytes exposed to concanavalin A.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1976
- Ultra-Rapid Fluorescent Labelling of ProteinsNature, 1962