Recent investigations have confirmed the presence of the polyphosphoinositides, phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)), as well as inositol phospholipid-specific phospholipase C in higher plant and microalgal cells. In addition, it has been shown that stimulation of some photosynthetic cell types by environmental or hormonal challenge is accompanied by degradation of the polyphosphoinositides. The products of phospholipase C-catalyzed PIP(2) hydrolysis, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol, appear to be capable of releasing organelle-bound Ca(2+) and stimulating protein kinase C-like activity in vitro. However, a direct cause and effect relationship between stimulated PIP(2) breakdown and changes in intracellular calcium, protein phosphorylation, or cell function has not yet been unequivocally established. Despite a number of technical difficulties slowing progress in this field, it is likely that photosynthetic organisms will soon be shown to transmit physiologically significant extracellular signals across their plasma membranes by a PIP(2)-mediated transduction mechanism.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.93.2.361 | DOI Listing |
Adv Exp Med Biol
October 2019
2nd Department of Pathology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
Plasma membrane Ca transport ATPases (PMCA1-4, ATP2B1-4) are responsible for removing excess Ca from the cell in order to keep the cytosolic Ca ion concentration at the low level essential for normal cell function. While these pumps take care of cellular Ca homeostasis they also change the duration and amplitude of the Ca signal and can create Ca gradients across the cell. This is accomplished by generating more than twenty PMCA variants each having the character - fast or slow response, long or short memory, distinct interaction partners and localization signals - that meets the specific needs of the particular cell-type in which they are expressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParathyroid hormone (PTH) produced a dose-dependent immediate stimulation of inositol triphosphate and diacylglycerol production in the opossum kidney cell line, primary culture proximal tubular cells, and basolateral membranes from canine proximal tubular segments. The increase in inositol triphosphate production was accompanied by a minor increase in inositol phosphate and no significant increase in inositol bisphosphate production. Associated with the changes in inositol triphosphate and diacylglycerol, there was an immediate hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4'5-bisphosphate.
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