Abstract
Teleost pigment cells (erythrophores and melanophores) are useful models for studying the regulation of rapid, microtubule-dependent organelle transport. Previous studies suggest that melanophores regulate the direction of pigment movements via changes in intracellular cAMP (Rozdzial and Haimo, 1986a; Sammak et al., 1992), whereas erythrophores may use calcium- (Ca2+- ) based regulation (Luby-Phelps and Porter, 1982; McNiven and Ward, 1988). Despite these observations, there have been no direct measurements in intact erythrophores or any cell type correlating changes of intracellular free Ca2+ ([Ca2+](i)) with organelle movements. Here we demonstrate that extracellular Ca2+ is necessary and that a Ca2+ influx via microinjection is sufficient to induce pigment aggregation in erythrophores, but not melanophores of squirrel fish. Using the Ca2+-sensitive indicator, Fura-2, we demonstrate that [Ca2+](i) rises dramatically concomitant with aggregation of pigment granules in erythrophores, but not melanophores. In addition, we find that an erythrophore stimulated to aggregate pigment will immediately transmit a rise in [Ca2+](i) to neighboring cells, suggesting that these cells are electrically coupled. Surprisingly, we find that a fall in [Ca2+](i) is not sufficient to induce pigment dispersion in erythrophores, contrary to the findings obtained with the ionophore and lysed-cell models (Luby-Phelps and Porter, 1982; McNiven and Ward, 1988). We find that a rise in intracellular cAMP ([cAMP](i)) induces pigment dispersion, and that this dispersive stimulus can be overridden by an aggregation stimulus, suggesting that both high [cAMP](i) and low [Ca2+](i) are necessary to produce pigment dispersion in erythrophores.
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CITATION STYLE
Kotz, K. J., & McNiven, M. A. (1994). Intracellular calcium and cAMP regulate directional pigment movements in teleost erythrophores. Journal of Cell Biology, 124(4), 463–474. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.124.4.463
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