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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1475-1490
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Equipe Canaux et Récepteurs Membranaires Unité Mixte de Recherche 6026-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université de Rennes 1, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France
Benquet, Pascal,
Janine Le
Guen,
Yves Pichon, and
François Tiaho.
Differential Involvement of Ca2+ Channels in Survival
and Neurite Outgrowth of Cultured Embryonic Cockroach Brain
Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1475-1490, 2002. The contribution of voltage-gated calcium channels
(VGCC) to the development of cultured embryonic cockroach brain neurons was assessed using pharmacological agents. VGCC currents were recorded
using the patch-clamp technique and were found to be blocked
dose-dependently by micromolar concentrations of mibefradil. The
activation and inactivation properties of the calcium channels enable a
sizeable calcium current to flow at rest (about
30 and
20 mV in
high-potassium culture media). As expected, the cytoplasmic-free calcium concentration was found to rise when the extracellular potassium concentration was raised from 3 to 15 and 30 mM. The effects
of VGCC blockers and calcium chelators were different in fresh and in
mature cultures in which the neurons were connected to each other to
form a defined network. In fresh cultures, the two non-selective VGCC
blockers (verapamil and mibefradil) induced a dose-dependent cell death
that was proportional to their blocking effect on
IBa. This effect could not be
prevented by addition of fetal calf serum to the culture medium. A
similar effect was obtained using intra- or extracellular calcium
chelating agents (10 µM BAPTA-AM or 10 mM EGTA). Quite unexpectedly,
blockade of the P/Q-like (
-Aga WA-sensitive) component
of the calcium current by 500 nM of
-AgaTx IVA had no lethal effect,
suggesting that the corresponding channels are not involved in the
survival mechanism. As expected from their lack of effect on
IBa, isradipine, nifedipine, and
-CgTx GVIA did not induce cell death. When the neurons
started growing neurites, their sensitivity to calcium channel blockade by mibefradil decreased, indicating a correlation between neurite outgrowth and resistance to calcium depletion. In mature cultures, the
neurons became resistant to mibefradil, verapamil, and BAPTA-AM. However, these agents, as well as
-AgaTx IVA, had a significant inhibitory effect on the increase in diameter of the connectives that
linked adjacent clusters of neurons. This effect has been shown to
result, in the case of mibefradil, from an inhibition of neurite
outgrowth characterized by a significant reduction of the number of
primary neurites and secondary branchings but not to a significant
modification of the diameter of individual neurites. These results
support the view that, as in vertebrates, calcium influx through VGCC
plays an important role in survival and neurite outgrowth of cultured
embryonic insect neurons. The differential contribution of the P/Q-like
and R-like (
-Aga WA-sensitive) calcium channels in these
processes is discussed.
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