Calcium influx in induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells

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Abstract

Murine etythroleukemia cells (MELC) have served as a model for examining the regulation of erythroid differentiation. However, the role of Ca2+ in the signal transduction pathways regulating differentiation remains unclear. To begin to address this uncertainty we have characterized the regulation of cytoplasmic Ca2+ and the possible role of calcium channels during induced differentiation in MELC. MELC can be induced to terminal differentiation using the polar/apolar compound hexamethylene bisacetamide (HMBA). We found that HMBA stimulated Ca2+ influx within 3 to 6 minutes and that Ca2+ entry was required but not sufficient for MELC growth and differentiation. Nifedipine (1 to 10 μmol/L), a calcium channel antagonist, blocked HMBA-induced Ca2+ influx and inhibited differentiation by ∼60%. Depolarization of the MELC membrane did not induce Ca2+ influx and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings failed to detect a voltage-activated Ca2+ current, suggesting that MELC do not express detectable levels of a functional voltage-dependent calcium channel (VDCC). However, a cDNA probe encoding a portion of the a, subunit of the cardiac VDCC detected an ∼8-kb mRNA on Northern blots of total MELC RNA. Taken together, these data show that Ca2+ influx is an early event associated with HMBA-induced differentiation in MELC, blockade of this calcium influx inhibits induced differentiation, and a voltage-insensitive dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium channel may be involved in Ca2+ influx in MELC. © 1993 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Gillo, B., Ma, Y. S., & Marks, A. R. (1993). Calcium influx in induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells. Blood, 81(3), 783–792. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v81.3.783.783

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