Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Calgary,
Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1
 |
INTRODUCTION |
THERE HAS BEEN A GREAT
DEAL of interest recently in the effects of halides and other
anions on the function of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). It has been
reported, for example, that some anions including Cl
and
I
can increase the Ca2+ permeability of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor over that measured in the presence
of organic anions such as propionate
(2, 8, 25, 26,
29). A Cl
-sensitive nonselective channel that
allows Ca2+ to permeate the SR membrane has also been
postulated to exist in skeletal muscle (39). Other
investigators (37) suggested that the SR Ca2+
pump itself can be directly inhibited by I
and
SCN
. In addition to affecting these mechanisms, the
anionic environment of the SR could also influence the movement of
compensatory charge across the SR membrane during Ca2+
uptake or release. That such movement occurs has been inferred primarily from the following two types of observations (reviewed in
Refs. 3, 7, 22, 23,
30, and 40): 1) although the
Ca2+-ATPase of the SR of muscle cells is believed to be
electrogenic, a sustained membrane potential has not been detected
across the SR membrane; and 2) both anion and cation
channels are found in SR membranes. Thus other ions are thought to
cross the membrane to balance charge as Ca2+ is released
from the SR or actively transported into the SR. In support of this
mechanism in smooth muscle, we (33) have shown that SR
Ca2+ uptake is inhibited in the presence of the
Cl
channel inhibitors
5-nitro-2(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid (NPPB) or indanyloxyacetic
acid 94 [R(+)-IAA-94] and by the substitution of
SO
for Cl
in the medium outside the
SR. In a recent work (14), we have shown that
cardiac SR Ca2+ uptake is inhibited by the
Cl
channel blocker tamoxifen. The latter effect
occurs without an alteration in the ATPase activity of the SR
Ca2+ pump and without a significant change in the
permeability of the SR membrane to Ca2+.
In the work reported here, we studied Ca2+ uptake into
cardiac SR vesicles when I
, Br
, or
SO
were substituted for extravesicular Cl
. SR Ca2+ uptake was not inhibited by the
substitution of SO
for Cl
. Net
Ca2+ uptake rate was significantly reduced, however, when
Br
or I
was substituted for
Cl
. This occurred without a detectable effect of
I
or Br
on the ATPase activity of the SR
Ca2+ pump and without an increase in the Ca2+
permeability of the SR membrane.
 |
METHODS |
Preparation of SR vesicles.
Animals were euthanized with an overdose of pentobarbital sodium in
accordance with procedures approved by the Canadian Council on Animal
Care and the University of Calgary Faculty of Medicine Animal Care
Committee. SR vesicles were prepared from canine ventricular tissue as previously described (15) according to the
method of Chamberlain et al. (1) omitting the sucrose
density gradient centrifugation step.
Measurement of SR Ca2+ uptake.
The fluorometric method for measuring Ca2+ uptake into SR
vesicles using fura 2 was described previously (15, 16,
18). Briefly, SR vesicles were first diluted to a total protein
concentration of 1 mg/ml in uptake buffer containing 100 mM KX (where X
is Cl
, I
, or Br
), 4 mM
MgX2, and 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.0); or 50 mM
K2SO4, 4 mM MgSO4, and 20 mM HEPES.
Vesicle samples were then added to a 4-ml cuvette containing 2 ml of
uptake buffer. For most experiments, oxalate was included in uptake
buffer to act as a trapping ion for Ca2+ within the SR
(28). When oxalate was not included, a higher vesicle
protein concentration and other adjustments to the uptake buffers were
required to increase measurable SR Ca2+ uptake. Differences
in the uptake buffers that were used in experiments done in the
presence and absence of oxalate are shown in Table 1. When tetraethylammonium (TEA; 10 mM)
was added to either KI or KCl uptake buffer, the K+
concentration of the buffers was reduced by 10 mM to maintain ionic
strength. Uptake was initiated by the addition of Ca2+ to
the cuvette. Fluorescence was measured with a SPEX fluorimeter (CMX
model; Edison, NJ). Fura 2 was excited at 340- and 380-nm wavelengths,
and fluorescence emission was measured through a 510-nm band-pass
filter (10-nm bandwidth). Fluorescence ratios (340-380 nm) were
obtained every 1 s. The contents of the cuvette were continuously
stirred during the course of an experiment.
Determination of velocity of Ca2+
uptake.
For experiments done in the presence of oxalate, the free
Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]free),
total Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]total), and instantaneous uptake
velocity were determined from the fura 2 fluorescence ratio values
after correction for background fluorescence and light scatter as
described previously (9, 14-18).
[Ca2+]total was determined from
[Ca2+]free as described previously
(14-18) using published binding constants (4,
12, 27, 36). The protein concentration of the vesicle preparations was determined by the Bradford protein assay (kit purchased from Bio-Rad; Hercules, CA). The maximum velocity of Ca2+ uptake was determined from plots of uptake velocity
versus [Ca2+]free as described by Kargacin
and Kargacin (15).
Oxalate is capable of crossing the SR membrane and acts as a
Ca2+-precipitating anion within SR vesicles
(28). The advantages of using oxalate in uptake buffers
are that it permits greater unidirectional Ca2+ movement
and prolongs the initial rapid phase of uptake (28). This
allows uptake to be determined from a single vesicle sample over the
entire range of physiological [Ca2+]free
(15, 18). As discussed below (see RESULTS),
however, it was necessary to conduct some experiments in the absence of oxalate. Without oxalate acting as a trapping ion in the SR lumen, as
uptake occurs, the free Ca2+ gradient that develops across
the vesicle membrane inhibits further uptake. This causes a decline in
the rate of uptake to occur at free Ca2+ levels that are
higher than those required to define complete uptake velocity curves
similar to those obtained in the presence of oxalate. Therefore, for
experiments done without oxalate, velocity was determined from the
slope of the steepest part of [Ca2+]total
versus time curves.
In either the presence or absence of oxalate, the rate of
Ca2+ uptake for a specific cardiac SR vesicle preparation
is dependent on the purity of the preparation. For this reason, to
allow experiments done with different vesicle preparations to be
compared, uptake velocities are expressed as a percentage of the
average control value (set at 100%) obtained in each experiment. The
actual values for the uptake velocities of the control samples done in
the presence of oxalate ranged from ~0.3 to ~0.7
µmol · min
1 · mg
1 for the
vesicle preparations used in the present study.
Measurement of SR Ca2+ release.
For Ca2+ release experiments, the uptake buffers described
above were used except that 5 mM D-glucose was included as
a substrate for hexokinase and creatine phosphate (CP) and creatine
phosphokinase (CPK) were omitted from the uptake buffer. After
the SR was loaded and net Ca2+ movement into the SR
stopped, hexokinase (4.7 U/ml) was added to the cuvette to deplete the
buffer of ATP to allow passive Ca2+ release to be measured.
Measurement of ATPase activity of SR
Ca2+ pump using NADH fluorescence.
An enzyme-coupled assay (19) in which ATP hydrolysis by
the SR Ca2+ pump is coupled to the conversion of NADH to
NAD+ was adapted to determine whether substitution of
Br
or I
for Cl
directly
inhibited the SR Ca2+ pump. The ATPase activity of the pump
was measured in a 4-ml cuvette in buffers containing 100 mM KX (where X
is Cl, I, or Br), 4 mM MgX2, 0.15 mM NADH, 0.21 U/ml
pyruvate kinase, 0.46 mM phospho(enol)pyruvate, 2.2 U/ml lactate
dehydrogenase (LDH), 1.1 mM ATP, 3.3 µM 4-Br-A23187, and 20 mM HEPES
(pH 7.0; [Ca2+]free
3 µM). The
Ca2+ ionophore 4-Br-A23187 was included in the buffer to
prevent the ATPase activity of the SR Ca2+ pump from being
influenced by the reduction of extravesicular Ca2+ or by
the establishment of a Ca2+ gradient across the SR membrane
(discussed in Ref. 5). Solutions in the cuvette were
continuously stirred throughout an experiment. Background fluorescence
measurements (made with vesicles and all components except NADH in the
cuvette) and measurements of the change in NADH fluorescence (made with
all components except ATP in the cuvette) were used to correct the
measurements of the changes in NADH fluorescence due to the ATPase
activity of the SR Ca2+ pump. Calibration curves for NADH
fluorescence were determined (Fig.
1A) by adding known amounts of
NADH to KCl, KBr, or KI buffer. There were no effects of
I
or Br
on NADH fluorescence. The
calibration curves (which deviate from linearity due to the inner
filter effect; see Ref. 24) were fit by the equation
|
(1)
|
where F is the fluorescence intensity in counts per second and
a and b are constants. For SR vesicles, the
change in NADH content in the sample was linear (see Fig. 5); the rate
of change of NADH was therefore determined from linear regression for a 100- to 200-point (50-100 s) segment of the data. For the assay, the sample sizes ranged from 30-190 µg vesicle protein depending on the SR vesicle preparation used. To rule out the possibility that
the ATPase assay itself was rate limiting, control experiments were
done to show that doubling the amounts of pyruvate kinase and LDH in
the assay did not change the Ca2+-ATPase rates measured by
the assay. The ATPase activity of the preparation (when expressed as
µmol · min
1 · mg
1 vesicle
protein) was also not altered when the amount of vesicle protein was
doubled.

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Fig. 1.
NADH-based ATPase assay. A: calibration of
NADH fluorescence. Fluorescence intensity as a function of NADH
concentration ([NADH]) in KCl ( ) and KI
( ) buffer (excitation 350 nm; emission 450 nm) after
subtraction of background fluorescence. Lines were drawn according to
Eq. 1 with the constants a = 18.3 × 104 and b = 48.46 for KCl buffer (solid
line) and a = 17.8 × 104 and
b = 45.74 KI buffer (dotted line). B and
C: inhibition of the NADH fluorescence ATPase assay by
Br or I . The response of the NADH
fluorescence assay to the addition of ADP to KCl, KBr, or KI buffer was
determined. B: NADH as a function of time after the addition
of 145 µM ADP to KCl buffer (circles) and KI buffer (squares).
Experiments were done in a 4-ml cuvette containing 2 ml of buffer
containing the reagents for the assay (see text). The amount of NADH
(in nmol) was determined from fluorescence using the calibration curves
in A and the sample volumes in the cuvette. In these
experiments, the maximum rates of response of the ATPase assay (solid
lines) were determined from line fits to the first 100 data points (50 s; solid symbols) after the addition of ADP. The maximum rate of
response of the assay to the addition of ADP in KI buffer was 31.3% of
that measured in KCl buffer, indicating that I inhibited
the assay itself. Note: only every 4th data point is plotted for
clarity. C: summary of results of experiments similar to
that shown in B for KCl (n = 12), KBr
(n = 6), and KI (n = 6) buffers.
Response rates, expressed as percentage of control, were 65.2% in KBr
and 29.4% in KI and were significantly different from the rate in KCl
(100%) at P = 0.0009 and P = 2.3 × 10 7, respectively. Error bars are +1 SD.
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|
To determine whether substitution of Cl
with
Br
or I
had a direct effect on the
enzyme-coupled ATPase assay, NADH fluorescence changes (Fig.
1B) were measured by adding ADP to KCl, KBr, or KI buffers
plus assay components but without ATP or SR vesicles present. The
results of these experiments showed that Br
and to a
greater extent I
inhibit the assay itself. As shown in
Fig. 1C, the initial rate of change of NADH fluorescence in
the ATPase assay in response to ADP addition was reduced to 65.2% of
control in KBr buffer and to a greater extent (29.4% of control) in KI
buffer. These results were used to correct the measurements of ATPase
activity of the cardiac SR Ca2+ pump.
Measurement of ATPase activity of SR
Ca2+ pump using purine-nucleoside
phosphorylase.
A second spectrophotometric assay (43, 44) in which the
inorganic phosphate (Pi) generated by the ATPase activity
of the SR Ca2+ pump was measured was also used to determine
whether substitution of I
for Cl
had a
direct inhibitory effect on the SR Ca2+-ATPase. In the
assay, purine-nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) converts 2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methylpurine riboside (MESG) and Pi to
ribose 1-phosphate (R1-P) and 2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methypurine (AMM)
|
(2)
|
As the SR Ca2+ pump hydrolyzes ATP and generates
Pi, conversion of MESG (maximum absorbance at 330 nm) to
AMM (maximum absorbance at 360 nm) results in an absorbance increase at
360 nm that is proportional to the change in Pi. The
generation of Pi by turnover of the cardiac SR
Ca2+ pump was measured in buffer containing 100 mM KX
(where X is Cl or I), 4 mM MgX2, 1.1 mM ATP, 1 U/ml PNP,
150 µM MESG, and 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.0;
[Ca2+]free
3 µM). 4-Br-A23187 (3.3 µM)
was included in the buffer for the reasons discussed above.
Measurements were made in a 4-ml cuvette with an ultraviolet/visible
spectrophotometer (model Lambda 3B, Perkin-Elmer; Norwalk, CT);
solutions in the cuvette were continuously stirred during the
experiments. The assay system was calibrated by adding known amounts of
Pi to the buffers. The calibration curves in Fig.
2A show that the magnitude of
the change in absorbance for a given change in Pi was
slightly less in KI buffer than it was in KCl buffer. The rate at which
the assay responded to step changes in Pi was also compared
in KCl and KI buffers. Figure 2B shows that the response of
the assay to step changes in Pi was slightly slower in the
KI buffer. The mean initial rate of response in KI buffer (determined
as shown in Fig. 2B) for a variety of step changes and
starting Pi concentrations was 79.4 ± 4.6%
(n = 7) of that measured in KCl buffer. Figure
2C shows that the rate at which the enzyme system could
respond to changes in Pi was not limited by the rate at
which solutions could be stirred into the cuvette.

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Fig. 2.
Calibration of the purine-nucleoside absorbance assay.
A: absorbance at 360 nm as a function of Pi in
KCl ( ) and KI ( ). Slopes of the lines
drawn from line fits to the data were 0.01277 absorbance
units/[Pi] ([Pi] in µM) in KCl and
0.01225 absorbance units/[Pi] ([Pi] in
µM) in KI. B: rate of response of the assay after step
changes in Pi in KCl (circles) or KI (squares) buffer.
Equal amounts of Pi in H2O were added to a 4-ml
cuvette containing 3.3 ml KCl or KI buffer and 137 µM
2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methylpurine riboside (MESG), 1 U/ml
purine-nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), and 3.0 µM 4-Br-A23187.
Pi as a function of time was determined from the
calibration curves in A. The maximum rate of response
(determined from line fits to the points shown by closed symbols) in KI
buffer was 80.8% of that measured in KCl buffer. Note: data collected
during the first 4 s (the time required for mixing; see
C) after the addition of Pi to the cuvette was
not included in the calibration. C: time required for
mixing. The time required for solutions added to the cuvette to mix was
determined by adding fixed amounts of reaction product
(2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methylpurine) to a cuvette containing 3 ml of KCl
buffer. It required a mean time of 3.5 s for the assay system to
completely respond to a step change in absorbance resulting from the
addition of reaction product. D: generation of
Pi by the cardiac muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)
vesicle preparation. Pi generation (circles) was measured
in a 4-ml cuvette containing 2 ml of KCl buffer, 30 µg of SR
vesicles, 3.3 µM 4-Br-A23187, 150 µM MESG, 1 U/ml PNP, and 1.5 mM
ATP; free Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]free) was ~3 µM. The solid line is
the line fit to a 100-point segment ( ) of the data. The
slope of the line (0.199 nmol Pi/s) corresponds to an
ATPase rate of 0.398 µmol
Pi · min 1 · mg 1.
Note: only every 4th data point is plotted for clarity.
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For the measurement of the ATPase activity of the SR Ca2+
pump, all assay components except cardiac SR vesicles were first added to the buffer and the reaction described in Eq. 2 was
allowed to proceed to remove contaminating Pi in the
buffer. Vesicles (30 µg) were then added, and the additional
Pi generated by the SR Ca2+ pump was determined
as a function of time from the change in absorbance at 360 nm (measured
at 1-s intervals) with the use of the calibrations shown in Fig. 2. The
slopes of the Pi versus time curves (determined by a linear
fit to the steepest linear part of the curve; typically 100 data
points = 100 s) were determined and used to compare the
ATPase activity of the SR Ca2+ pump in different solutions.
Figure 2D shows a curve of Pi versus time for an
experiment with SR vesicles in KCl buffer.
Reagents.
ADP (potassium salt), K2ATP, CP, CPK, NADH, phosphoenol
pyruvate, pyruvate kinase, dithiothreitol, 4-aminopyridine,
D-glucose, and histidine were purchased from Sigma Chemical
(St. Louis, MO). Aristar grade KCl, KOH, and sucrose, Suprapur KI, and
AnalaR KBr were purchased from BDH (Edmonton, AB, Canada). Hexokinase
was purchased from Roche Diagnostics (Laval, QC, Canada). Microselect MgCl2 · 6H2O and
MgBr2 · 6H2O, puriss grade oxalic acid
and MgSO4 · 7H2O, purum grade TEA
hydroxide, and MgI2, ruthenium red, and HEPES (potassium
salt) were purchased from Fluka (Ronkonkoma, NY). LDH was purchased
from Worthington (Freehold, NJ). Fura 2 free acid, 4-Br-A23187, and the
reagents for the purine-nucleoside phosphorylase assay (ENZCheck kit)
were purchased from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR).
Experiments were carried out at 22°C. In RESULTS, errors
are expressed as ±1 SD.
 |
RESULTS |
Effect of anion substitutions on
Ca2+ uptake in SR vesicles in presence of
oxalate.
Substitution of K2SO4 for KCl in the uptake
buffer did not significantly change the rate at which Ca2+
was taken up into the SR in the presence of oxalate. A comparison of
uptake rates in K2SO4 and KCl buffers is shown
in Fig. 3A. The uptake rate in
KBr uptake buffer was less than that measured in KCl uptake buffer
(Fig. 3B) and was slower still in KI uptake buffer (Fig.
3C). For the experiments shown, the maximum uptake rate was
71.9% of control in KBr and 44.4% of control in KI buffer. Consistent
with the results shown in Fig. 3, A-C, the results of
several similar paired experiments showed that the maximum velocity was
significantly lower in KBr (69.8 ± 4.6% in KBr,
n = 7; 100.0 ± 7.8% in KCl, n = 7) and KI (39.3 ± 2.6% in KI, n = 6; 100.0 ± 13.4% in KCl, n = 5) buffers. Uptake velocity was not significantly different from control in
K2SO4 buffer (94.4 ± 8.8% in
K2SO4, n = 5; 100.0 ± 13.4% in KCl, n = 8). Figure 3D shows that
the inhibitory effects of Br
and I
on
uptake velocity were concentration dependent.

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Fig. 3.
Anion substitution experiments. A: SR
Ca2+ uptake is shown as
[Ca2+]free vs. time for 25-µg cardiac
vesicle samples in KCl uptake buffer ( ) and
K2SO4 uptake buffer ( ). The
maximum uptake rates (determined as described in text) in the
Cl and SO buffers were 0.354 and
0.339 µmol · min 1 · mg 1,
respectively. B: as in A, showing uptake in KCl
uptake buffer ( ) and KBr uptake buffer
( ). Maximum uptake rates for the curves shown were
0.384 and 0.276 µmol · min 1 · mg 1 in the
presence of Cl and Br , respectively.
C: as in A, showing uptake in KCl uptake buffer
( ) and KI uptake buffer ( ). Maximum
uptake rates for the curves shown were 0.396 and 0.176 µmol · min 1 · mg 1 in
Cl and I , respectively. Note: in
A-C, only every 4th data point was plotted for clarity.
D: maximum Ca2+ uptake rate as a function of
Br or I concentration. Maximum
Ca2+ uptake rates for cardiac SR vesicles in uptake buffers
with different relative amounts of KBr and KCl ( ) and
maximum uptake rates obtained with different relative amounts of KI and
KCl ( ) are shown. Maximum uptake rates are given as
percentage of the average value for maximum uptake rate measured in the
control buffer (108 mM Cl :0 mM Br or
I ). Relative to the control uptake rate (100 ± 2.8%; n = 12), maximum uptake rate in the presence of
54 mM Br :54 mM Cl was 96.1 ± 5.0%
(n = 6) of control; maximum uptake rate in the presence
of 108 mM Br :0 mM Cl was 69.8 ± 4.6%
(n = 7) of control. Relative to control uptake rate
(100 ± 7.6%; n = 15), maximum uptake rate in the
presence of 50 mM I :58 mM Cl was 66.0 ± 5.9% (n = 6) of control; maximum uptake rate in the
presence of 100 mM I :8 mM Cl was 43.4 ± 2.2% (n = 5) of control; and maximum uptake rate in
the presence of 108 mM I :0 mM Cl was
39.3 ± 2.6% (n = 6) of control. Note: the open
and solid symbols for the control experiments were slightly offset from
one another horizontally to increase clarity. Error bars are ±1 SD;
*significantly different from control at P 0.01. E: uptake in KCl and KI buffers in the absence of oxalate.
Ca2+ uptake is shown as
[Ca2+]free vs. time for 0.25 mg of SR protein
in KCl buffer and 0.36 mg of SR protein in KI buffer. Uptake rates for
these experiments were 27.8 nmol · min 1 · mg 1 in KCl
and 11.9 nmol · min 1 · mg 1
in KI.
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Inhibition of Ca2+ uptake by
I
in absence of oxalate.
As noted above (see METHODS), measurement of SR
Ca2+ uptake in the presence of oxalate allows one to
determine uptake rate for a single sample over a range of physiological
[Ca2+]free. However, although the relative
concentration of oxalate to the other anions used in the experiments
described above was low (10 mM oxalate:108 mM other anions), the
presence of oxalate in the KBr and KI buffers may have partially masked
the full inhibitory effect of these anions on Ca2+
uptake. To test this possibility, the magnitude of the inhibitory effect of I
(the anion that inhibited SR uptake to the
greatest extent) on Ca2+ uptake was measured in the absence
of oxalate. Figure 3E shows that in the absence of oxalate,
SR Ca2+ uptake was still inhibited by I
to
approximately the same extent as it was in the presence of oxalate
(Fig. 3, C and D). In experiments similar to
those shown in Fig. 3E, the maximum rate of SR
Ca2+ uptake in KI buffer was 32.0 ± 7.9%
(n = 6) of the maximum rate of uptake seen in KCl. This
inhibitory effect of I
was not significantly different
(P = 0.11) from that measured in oxalate buffer, where
the rate in KI buffer was 39.3 ± 2.6% of the rate in KCl
(n = 6).
Inhibitory effect of I
on SR
Ca2+ uptake in presence of ruthenium red.
It is possible that SR Ca2+ uptake could be inhibited in
the presence of Br
or I
if these anions
increased the permeability of the SR membrane to
Ca2+. The increased leak of
Ca2+ out of the SR would reduce the net
amount of Ca2+ moved into the SR by the Ca2+
pump over any time interval. This possibility is consistent with recent
results indicating that the permeability of the skeletal muscle SR
membrane to Ca2+ is greater in the presence of some
inorganic anions than it is in the presence of organic anions such as
propionate
(2, 8, 25, 26, 29, 31, 39). These
reported increases in permeability, whether they occur through the
ryanodine receptor (2, 8, 25, 26, 29) or through a
different SR channel (39), are blocked by ruthenium red
(see Refs. 8, 26, and 39). Therefore,
if Br
or I
inhibited net SR
Ca2+ uptake in our experiments by increasing the
permeability of the cardiac SR membrane through one of these
mechanisms, one would expect ruthenium red to block this inhibition.
Because the Ca2+ sensitivity of the cardiac SR
Ca2+-ATPase is reduced by ruthenium red (17),
Ca2+ uptake measurements made in KI uptake buffer
containing ruthenium red were compared with control experiments done in
KCl buffer with the same concentration of ruthenium red. As shown in
Fig. 4A, SR Ca2+
uptake was reduced by I
even in the presence of ruthenium
red. The extent of inhibition by I
was the same when
ruthenium red (20 µM) was present in the uptake buffers (summarized
in Fig. 4B) as it was in the absence of ruthenium red (mean
uptake rate in KI with ruthenium red was 32.0 ± 6.1% of the rate
in KCl with ruthenium red; mean uptake rate in KI without ruthenium red
was 39.3 ± 2.6% of the rate in KCl buffer without ruthenium
red).

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Fig. 4.
Substitution of Cl with I
does not alter the permeability of the SR membrane to Ca2+.
A and B: inhibition of SR Ca2+ uptake
by I in the presence of ruthenium red. A: SR
Ca2+ uptake as a function of time in KCl buffer with 20 µM ruthenium red (bottom trace) and KI buffer with 20 µM
ruthenium red (top trace). For this experiment, maximum
uptake rate was 0.248 µmol · min 1 · mg 1 in KCl
buffer and 0.098 µmol · min 1 · mg 1 in KI
buffer. B: summary of results with ruthenium red. Maximum
rate of SR Ca2+ uptake in KI buffer + 20 µM
ruthenium red was 32 ± 6% (n = 8; crosshatched
bar) of the maximum uptake rate in KCl buffer + 20 µM ruthenium
red (100 ± 18%, n = 8; open bar). Error bars are
+1 SD. C and D: Ca2+ release in the
presence of Cl and I . C: cardiac
SR samples (0.145 mg) were loaded with Ca2+ in the presence
of ATP (K2ATP = 0.76 mM) in KCl ( ) and
KI ( ) uptake buffer. Ca2+ uptake was
allowed to proceed until [Ca2+]free declined
to 60 nM in the cuvette. Hexokinase was then added (at 335 s for
KCl; 500 s for KI) to rapidly deplete the buffer of ATP, and the
rates of the resulting Ca2+ release were compared in the
two buffers. D: Ca2+ release segments from the
curves in C are shown for KCl ( ) and KI
( ) aligned on the time axis for comparison. Release
rates were determined by a linear regression fit to the first 100 points of the release curves. Release rates were 2.28 × 10 3 µM/s in KCl (regression line shown by dashed line)
and 1.86 × 10 3 µM/s for KI (solid line). These
rates, normalized to total protein, were 1.97 nmol · min 1 · mg 1 in KCl
buffer and 1.61 nmol · min 1 · mg 1 in KI
buffer.
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|
Our results with ruthenium red show that the inhibitory action of
I
on SR Ca2+ uptake that was seen in our
experiments cannot be explained by an I
-induced increase
in the permeability of the SR membrane to Ca2+ that
involves one of the mechanisms discussed above. It is possible, however, that I
or Br
increased the
permeability of a SR Ca2+ channel that is not sensitive to
ruthenium red. To test this possibility, we compared the leakiness of
the cardiac SR membrane to Ca2+ in the presence and absence
of I
by measuring the passive rate of release of
Ca2+ from the SR when the Ca2+ pump was rapidly
deprived of ATP. This was done by first allowing SR vesicles to take up
Ca2+ to the same extent in either KCl or KI buffer and then
adding hexokinase to rapidly hydrolyze the ATP available to the
Ca2+ pump (see Ref. 5). The results of one of
these experiments are shown in Fig. 4, C and D.
It can be seen that the rate of release of Ca2+ from the SR
is faster in KCl buffer than it is in KI buffer (release rate in KCl
buffer was 1.94 ± 0.19 nmol · min
1 · mg
1,
n = 5; release rate in KI buffer was 1.52 ± 0.06 nmol · min
1 · mg
1,
n = 5). This is inconsistent with an
I
-induced increase in the permeability of the SR membrane
to Ca2+.
ATPase activity of SR Ca2+ pump in
presence of Br
or I
.
A second mechanism that could account for the inhibitory effects of
I
and Br
on SR Ca2+ uptake is a
direct effect of these ions on the SR Ca2+ pump. This
possibility is consistent with some results in the literature
(37) but not with others (11). To determine
whether I
or Br
directly inhibited the SR
Ca2+ pump in our experiments, two methods were used to
determine the ATPase activity of the SR Ca2+ pump in the
presence of Cl
, Br
, and I
.
With the use of the ATPase assay in which NADH fluorescence is measured
(see METHODS), Stefanova et al. (37) reported
a direct inhibition of the skeletal muscle SR Ca2+-ATPase
by I
; however, these authors did not discuss any effect
of I
on the assay itself. Therefore, because we found
that the rate at which the assay responded to fixed concentration of
ADP was reduced in KBr buffer to 65.2% of the rate seen in KCl and, to a greater extent (29.4%), in KI buffer (see METHODS and
Fig. 1), we examined the ATPase activity of the cardiac SR
Ca2+ pump in the presence of Br
and
I
and made corrections for the effects of these ions on
the enzyme-coupled assay itself. Before correction for the direct
inhibition of the assay by Br
, the maximum ATPase rate of
the SR vesicles in KBr buffer was 72.9% of the maximum rate measured
in KCl; before correction, the maximum rate in KI buffer was 38% of
control (see Fig. 5B). The
apparent reductions in the rates in Br
and
I
could be completely accounted for by the inhibitory
effects of Br
and I
on the enzyme-coupled
ATPase assay (Fig. 5, A and B). Although the
corrected results in Fig. 5B suggest that the ATPase rates in KBr and KI buffers may be somewhat faster than those measured in KCl
buffer (significantly higher than those measured in KCl buffer at
P = 0.026 in KBr and P = 0.034 in
KI), the second ATPase assay (see below) indicates that this was
probably not the case.

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Fig. 5.
Hydrolysis of ATP by the SR
Ca2+ pump in KCl, KBr, and KI buffers determined with the
NADH fluorescence assay. A: NADH as a function of time
monitored by the NADH fluorescence assay for 190-µg SR vesicle
samples in KCl and KI buffers. Raw data obtained before correction for
the effect of I on the ATPase assay are shown (solid
symbols). The maximum rates of change in NADH for the raw data (red
lines) were determined by line fits to the data segments between the
yellow symbols. These slopes were 1.25 nmol/s in KCl buffer and
0.457 nmol/s in KI buffer. These values correspond to ATPase rates of
0.395 µmol
Pi · min 1 · mg 1
in KCl and 0.144 µmol
Pi · min 1 · mg 1
in KI buffer, respectively. The maximum uncorrected rate of change in
NADH in KI was 36.8% of that measured in KCl buffer; this difference
in rate could be entirely accounted for by the inhibition of the ATPase
assay itself by I (response of the assay in KI buffer to
a step change in ADP was reduced to 29.4 ± 9.8% of control; see
Fig. 1). The change in NADH in KI buffer after correction of the raw
data for the inhibition of the ATPase assay itself by I
is shown by the blue line (the slope of the corrected KI data = 1.55 nmol/s). B: ATPase activity of the SR
Ca2+ pump in KCl, KBr, and KI buffers. ATPase rates,
measured for SR vesicle samples, are expressed as a percentage of the
maximum rates in KCl buffer (red bars) before (open bars) and after
(blue bars) correction for the effects of Br or
I on the ATPase assay (n values are shown
above the bars). Error bars are +1 SD. Br and
I denote uncorrected results; *Br and
*I denote corrected results.
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|
Because the rate of oxidation of NADH was reduced for the assay itself
in the presence of Br
or I
(as shown in
Fig. 1), it might be argued that an additional effect of inhibitors on
the SR Ca2+-ATPase could not be detected with
this assay. To rule out this possibility, thapsigargin [a specific
inhibitor of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase
(SERCA) Ca2+ pumps; see Ref. 42] was used to
reduce the ATPase activity of the pump in the presence of
Cl
or I
, and the rate of change in NADH
fluorescence was determined. In two experiments in KCl buffer, 5 µM
thapsigargin reduced the maximum ATPase rate of the cardiac SR vesicle
preparation to 27.6% (range = 5%) of the rate measured in its
absence. In KI buffer, the inhibitory effect of 5 µM thapsigargin on
the measured ATPase rate was detectable and was 29.3 ± 9.7% of
the rate measured in KI buffer without thapsigargin (n = 4). In the presence of 10 µM thapsigargin, the measured ATPase rate
in KCl buffer was 20 ± 8% (n = 3) of that
measured in its absence and was not significantly different from that
measured in 5 µM thapsigargin.
Because of the inhibitory effect of I
on the
enzyme-coupled assay utilizing pyruvate, pyruvate kinase, LDH, and
NADH, a second method was also used to compare the ATPase activity of
the cardiac SR Ca2+ pump in KCl and KI buffers. The
purine-nucleotide absorbance assay, described by Eq. 2 (see
METHODS), was also affected by the presence of
I
but to a far lesser extent than the first assay
(compare Figs. 1 and 2). Figure 6
summarizes the results obtained with the absorbance assay and indicates
that, after the correction of the results for the direct inhibition of
the assay by I
, there were no differences in the
ATPase rates of the SR Ca2+ pump in KCl and KI buffers. The
ATPase rates measured for vesicles from the same preparation in KCl
buffer with this assay (0.398 µmol
Pi · min
1 · mg
1;
see Fig. 2) are in good agreement with those obtained using the NADH
fluorescence assay (0.395 µmol
Pi · min
1 · mg
1;
see Fig. 5). The effect of thapsigargin on the ATPase activity of the
SR Ca2+ pump was also measured with the absorbance assay.
As determined by the absorbance assay, 10.6 µM thapsigargin reduced
the measured ATPase activity of the vesicle preparation in KCl buffer
to 26.1 ± 2.3% (n = 3) of control. This is in
good agreement with the degree of inhibition (reduction to 20 ± 8% of control in 10 µM thapsigargin; see above) measured with the
NADH fluorescence assay.

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Fig. 6.
Hydrolysis of ATP by the SR Ca2+ pump in KCl
and KI buffers determined with the PNP (absorbance) assay. ATPase
activity expressed as a percentage of the mean activity in KCl buffer
(crosshatched bar) before (open bar) and after (hatched bar) correction
for the effect of I on the ATPase assay itself (corrected
rate in I = measured rate/0.808). The mean corrected
ATPase rate of the SR Ca2+ pump in KI buffer was not
significantly different from that measured in KCl (P = 0.68; n = 5 for all experiments). Error bars are +1 SD.
I denotes uncorrected results in KI buffer;
*I denotes corrected results.
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SR uptake in presence of TEA or 4-aminopyridine.
Although it has been suggested (see Refs. 22 and 23) that
Cl
may be the primary ion involved in compensating for
the net positive charge moved into the SR by the
Ca2+-ATPase, movement of K+ out of the SR lumen
may also occur and could become more important under conditions in
which anion movement is inhibited to the greatest extent (i.e., KI
buffer). To test the possibility that efflux of K+ out of
the SR occurred during SR Ca2+ uptake, uptake rates in KCl
and KI buffers were compared in the presence and absence of
4-aminopyridine or TEA. These blockers were used because they are known
to block skeletal muscle SR K+ channels from the
cytoplasmic side of the SR membrane at the concentrations used in our
experiments (6, 7). Figure 7 shows that 1 mM 4-aminopyridine had no significant effect on the maximum rate of SR Ca2+ uptake in KCl buffer or on the
reduced uptake rate measured in KI buffer. The maximum rates of uptake
in KCl or KI buffers were also unaffected by 10 mM TEA (results not
shown).

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Fig. 7.
Maximum uptake velocity in KCl or KI uptake buffers in
the absence or presence of 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). Maximum uptake rate
in KCl buffer in the presence of 1 mM 4-AP (hatched bar,
left) was not significantly different (92.9 ± 3.5%;
n = 5) from the maximum rate of uptake (100.0 ± 9.5%; n = 5) in the absence of 4-AP (open bar,
left). Maximum uptake rate in buffer containing 108 mM
I (open bar, right) was 36.1 ± 1.4%
(n = 6) of the maximum uptake rate obtained in KCl
buffer. The maximum uptake rate in KI buffer with 1 mM 4-AP (hatched
bar, right) was 35.3 ± 1.8% (n = 6)
of that measured in KCl buffer and was not significantly different from
that in determined in the presence of I without 4-AP
(36.1 ± 1.4%) at P 0.05. Error bars are +1
SD.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Table 2 summarizes the results of
our study showing that, although the substitution of extravesicular
Cl
with either Br
or I
inhibits Ca2+ uptake into cardiac SR vesicles, neither ion
has a direct inhibitory effect on the SR Ca2+ pump nor does
the inhibition of uptake appear to be accompanied by an increase in the
Ca2+ permeability of the SR membrane. As discussed below,
our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the anionic
environment of the SR can modulate Ca2+ uptake by
altering the movement of negative charge into the SR that occurs as
Ca2+ is actively transported by the Ca2+ pump.
Recent interest in the influence that the anionic environment of the SR
may have on its ability to regulate intracellular Ca2+ in
muscle cells has been focused primarily on the modulation of
Ca2+ channels in the SR that mediate Ca2+
release or control the leakiness of the SR membrane to
Ca2+. In skeletal muscle, Cl
and some other
inorganic anions (including I
; reviewed in Ref.
25) can increase the rate of release of Ca2+
through the ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channel over the
release rates measured in the presence of inorganic anions such as
propionate
, methanesulfonate
, or
gluconate
(2, 8, 25, 26, 29, 31, 39);
however, similar effects on the cardiac muscle ryanodine receptor have
not been consistently observed (8, 25). It has also been
proposed (39) that a nonselective channel mediates a
Cl
-induced increase in Ca2+ permeability in
skeletal muscle SR. This permeability increase was not seen with
I
or Br
(39). The
anion-dependent increases in Ca2+ release from skeletal
muscle SR, whether mediated through the ryanodine receptor or through a
Cl
-sensitive nonselective channel (39), have
been shown to be blocked by ruthenium red (see Refs. 26
and 39). In our experiments, the inhibition of SR uptake by the
substitution of I
for Cl
was the same in
the presence and absence of ruthenium red (Table 2 and Fig. 4). This is
inconsistent with the hypothesis that inhibitory effects
I
and Br
on net Ca2+ uptake are
due to an increased Ca2+ efflux through an SR
Ca2+ channel similar to those discussed above. We also
showed (Table 2 and Fig. 4) that I
did not increase the
leakiness of the SR membrane to Ca2+, as evidenced by the
rate at which Ca2+ was released from the SR when the ATP
available to the SR Ca2+ pump was rapidly removed by
hexokinase. From these experiments, we conclude that cardiac SR
Ca2+ uptake is inhibited by I
by a mechanism
that does not involve an increase in the Ca2+ permeability
of the SR membrane.
A second mechanism that might explain our results is a direct
inhibitory effect of I
or Br
on the SR
Ca2+ pump. Our results, however, do not support this
conclusion. Our results showing that I
does not
directly inhibit the cardiac SR Ca2+-ATPase are
consistent with those of Highsmith (11), who measured the
ATPase activity of the skeletal muscle SR Ca2+
pump in the presence of I
(at concentrations as high as
40 mM) with the use of molybdate to monitor phosphate release. On the
other hand, as noted above (see RESULTS), Stefanova et al.
(37) reported an inhibition of the skeletal muscle SR
Ca2+-ATPase by I
when ATPase
activity was monitored with the same enzyme-coupled ATPase assay (based
on NADH fluorescence) that was used in some of our experiments.
Although there may be differences in the influence of I
on the activity of the skeletal and cardiac SR Ca2+ pumps,
we believe that the discrepancy between the results of Highsmith
(11) and those of Stefanova et al. (37) and
between those of the latter authors and our own results can be
accounted for by the effect of I
on the NADH-based assay
itself. The conclusion that I
and Br
have
no direct inhibitory effects on the cardiac SR Ca2+ pump is
further supported by our results with the absorbance assay of
Ca2+-ATPase activity. It might be argued,
nevertheless, that I
and Br
do not affect
the ability of the SR Ca2+ pump to hydrolyze ATP but
uncouple this activity from the binding and transport of
Ca2+. To our knowledge, this type of uncoupling has not
been reported for any known direct inhibitors of SR
Ca2+ pumps. Our previous work (33) showing
that the rate of Ca2+ uptake into the SR of
smooth muscle is not detectably altered when Cl
is
replaced by either Br
or I
also argues
against an effect of these ions on the coupling between Ca2+ binding and ATPase activity. The SERCA2b
Ca2+ pump in smooth muscle is identical to the SERCA2a form
of the pump of cardiac muscle for most of its amino acid sequence (the 4-amino acid COOH-terminal sequence of SERCA2a is replaced by a
49-amino acid COOH-terminal addition in SERCA2b that is hydrophobic and
thought to insert into the smooth muscle SR membrane; reviewed in Ref.
34). Any direct effects of I
or
Br
on the binding of Ca2+ to the cardiac SR
Ca2+ pump would, therefore, have to be mediated by the four
COOH-terminal amino acids unique to the cardiac form of the pump or,
conversely, the 49-amino acid tail of the SERCA2b form of the pump
would have to prevent this from occurring in smooth muscle. It is thus
unlikely that Br
and I
would have this type
of a direct inhibitory effect on the SR Ca2+ pump in
cardiac muscle but not smooth muscle.
The results of our experiments are most consistent with the hypothesis
that I
and Br
inhibit cardiac SR
Ca2+ uptake by reducing the rate at which negative charge
moves into the SR as Ca2+ is actively transported by the
Ca2+-ATPase. The conclusion that such an anion influx
occurs during cardiac SR Ca2+ uptake is also consistent
with our recent work (14) showing that tamoxifen, an agent
known to block some types of Cl
channels, inhibits
cardiac SR uptake without directly inhibiting the SR Ca2+
pump and without inducing a significant increase in the permeability of
the SR membrane to Ca2+.
The fact that Br
and I
have no effect on
smooth muscle SR Ca2+ transport suggests that the
anion-permeant pathways in the SR are different in the two muscle
types. This conclusion is consistent with our findings
(33) that SR Ca2+ uptake in smooth muscle is
inhibited by two Cl
channel blockers [NPPB and
R(+)-IAA-94] that have no effect on cardiac muscle Ca2+ uptake.
We did not see effects of TEA (at a concentration high enough to block
many types of K+ channels) or of 4-aminopyridine on
Ca2+ uptake in KI or KCl uptake buffers. If K+
movement significantly contributed to charge compensation during SR
Ca2+ uptake, we might have expected the K+
channel blockers to inhibit uptake. The results with TEA and 4-aminopyridine are generally consistent with those of Fink and Stephenson (6; see also Ref. 7) who found that the amount
of force that could be produced by Ca2+ released from the
SR of skinned amphibian skeletal muscle fibers was not decreased but
instead increased slightly when the SR was loaded in the presence of
TEA (10 mm), 4-aminopyridine (6 µM-2 mM), or other
K+ channel blockers. Although our results cannot be used to
completely rule out the involvement of a K+-permeant
pathway in the cardiac SR membrane that allows cations to leave the SR
during Ca2+ uptake, they do indicate that if cation
movement does occur during uptake, it occurs through a channel or
channels that are TEA and 4-aminopyridine insensitive. It is important
to note in this regard that canine cardiac SR K+ channels
reconstituted into lipid bilayers were found to be insensitive to
pharmacological manipulation by lemakalim, glyburide, and charybdotoxin (32). It is also possible that the involvement of
K+ channels during uptake is more complex than would be
expected for a channel that simply allowed K+ efflux from
the SR (discussed in Refs. 6 and 7). Our results do not
address the possibility that K+ movement is important
during SR Ca2+ release.
Comparison of the properties of the striated muscle SR anion channels
that have been studied in isolation with the functional evidence from
our study suggests some possible candidates for the channel(s) that
mediates anion movement during SR Ca2+ uptake. Although a
number of the SR Cl
channels that have been characterized
in electrophysiological experiments have permeabilities to
I
and/or Br
that are greater than or equal
to that of Cl
(see Refs. 10,
13, and 41), a recent report by Kawano et al.
(20) describes a cardiac muscle SR anion channel that is less permeable to I
than to Cl
. This
channel is, however, more permeable to Br
than to
Cl
. There are a number of plasma membrane anion channels
found in muscle and nonmuscle cells that have permeabilities to
Br
and/or I
that are less than their
permeability to Cl
(reviewed in Ref. 38). In
our experiments, substitution of Cl
with
SO
did not alter the maximum rate of SR
Ca2+ uptake, a functional property that is consistent with
the involvement of a channel with properties similar to those of the
small conductance Cl
channel identified by Kourie et al.
(23) in rabbit skeletal muscle SR. To our knowledge, the
permeability of this channel to Br
or I
has
not been determined. In attempting to correlate single-channel studies
with functional studies of the intact SR, one must also consider the
possibility that different Cl
channels may function
during SR Ca2+ uptake and release or that more than one
anion channel type is involved in either or both of these processes in
the intact SR. If the latter possibility is the case, the properties of
the Cl
-permeant pathway that can be deduced from
measurements of net Ca2+ uptake or release would be a
composite of those of two or more channels. The relative importance of
these channels during Ca2+ uptake may depend on the anionic
environment of the SR and/or the involvement of other SR membrane
proteins or intracellular agents (see Refs. 21,
22, and 35, for example). The continued study of both the electrophysiological and molecular properties of
specific anion channels isolated from SR membranes and studies such as
ours, in which the net effects of various ions or molecules on SR
function are examined, should help distinguish among these possibilities.
We thank Dr. Thomas Honeyman at the University of Massachusetts
Medical School for helpful suggestions regarding ATPase measurements. We also thank Erwin Wirch for technical assistance and Lenore Youngberg
for secretarial assistance.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada, the
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Alberta, the American Heart Association,
the Ruth Rannie Memorial Endowment Fund, a University of Calgary
Research Award, the Hypertension Research Endowment (Miles Canada
Incorporated), and the Molson Health Research Fund. G. J. Kargacin
is an Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research Senior Scholar.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. J. Kargacin, Dept. of Physiology and Biophysics, Univ. of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Dr. NW, Calgary, AB, Canada T2N 4N1 (E-mail:
kargacin{at}ucalgary.ca).
The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article
must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement"
in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 15 June 2000; accepted in final form 2 November 2000.