Abstract
Acute pancreatitis is characterized by the pathologic activation of zymogens within pancreatic acinar cells. The process requires a rise in cytosolic Ca2+ from undefined intracellular stores. We hypothesized that zymogen activation is mediated by ryanodine receptor (RYR)-regulated Ca2+ release, because early zymogen activation takes place in a supranuclear compartment that overlaps in distribution with the RYR. Ca 2+ signals in the basolateral, but not apical, region of acinar cells observed during supraphysiologic agonist stimulation were dependent on RYR Ca2+ release. Inhibition of RYR or depletion of RYR-sensitive Ca 2+ pools each reduced pathologic zymogen activation in isolated acinar cells, but neither treatment affected amylase secretion. Inhibition of RYR also inhibited zymogen activation in vivo. We propose that Ca2+ release from the RYR mediates zymogen activation but not enzyme secretion. The findings imply a role for the RYR in acute pancreatitis. © 2005 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
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Husain, S. Z., Prasad, P., Grant, W. M., Kolodecik, T. R., Nathanson, M. H., & Gorelick, F. S. (2005). The ryanodine receptor mediates early zymogen activation in pancreatitis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 102(40), 14386–14391. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0503215102
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