Aluminium perturbs oscillatory phosphoinositide-mediated calcium signalling in hormone-stimulated hepatocytes

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Abstract

Aluminium is known to be toxic to cells from bone, brain and bone marrow but the molecular target(s) affected by Al3+ are not known. We show here that Al3+ disrupts the oscillatory free Ca2+ responses of hepatocytes exposed to the Ca2+-mobilizing agonist phenylephrine. Al3+ initially increases the frequency of the oscillations and later induces broad Ca2+ spikes lasting several minutes. These broad spikes persist after removal of both agonist and Al3+ from the medium. In the absence of agonist, Al3+ has no effect on free Ca2+. The data suggest that some component(s) of the receptor-phosphoinositide-Ca2+ signalling pathway might be the site at which Al3+ exerts toxic effects.

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Schofl, C., Sanchez-Bueno, A., Dixon, C. J., Woods, N. M., Lee, J. A. C., Cuthbertson, K. S. R., … Birchall, J. D. (1990). Aluminium perturbs oscillatory phosphoinositide-mediated calcium signalling in hormone-stimulated hepatocytes. Biochemical Journal, 269(2), 547–550. https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2690547

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