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    Date Issued2016 (1)2013 (1)AuthorFogarty, Kevin E. (2)
    Zhang, Cheng-Hai (2)
    Craige, Siobhan M. (1)Ikebe, Mitsuo (1)Keaney, John F. Jr. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (2)Program in Molecular Medicine (2)Biomedical Imaging Group (1)Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (1)Department of Surgery (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordCellular and Molecular Physiology (2)Molecular Biology (2)Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (1)Animal Experimentation and Research (1)Cell signalling (1)View MoreJournalNature communications (1)PLoS biology doi:10.1371/annotation/7899a865-d68b-45bd-8b9b-ec6f50c9308a (1)

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    The molecular basis of the genesis of basal tone in internal anal sphincter

    Zhang, Cheng-Hai; Lui, Donghai; Lu, Ping; Zheng, Kaizhi; Craige, Siobhan M.; Lifshitz, Lawrence; Keaney, John F. Jr.; Fogarty, Kevin E.; Zhuge, Ronghua; Zhu, Min-Sheng (2016-04-22)
    Smooth muscle sphincters exhibit basal tone and control passage of contents through organs such as the gastrointestinal tract; loss of this tone leads to disorders such as faecal incontinence. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this tone remain unknown. Here, we show that deletion of myosin light-chain kinases (MLCK) in the smooth muscle cells from internal anal sphincter (IAS-SMCs) abolishes basal tone, impairing defecation. Pharmacological regulation of ryanodine receptors (RyRs), L-type voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels (VDCCs) or TMEM16A Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) channels significantly changes global cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)]i) and the tone. TMEM16A deletion in IAS-SMCs abolishes the effects of modulators for TMEM16A or VDCCs on a RyR-mediated rise in global [Ca(2+)]i and impairs the tone and defecation. Hence, MLCK activation in IAS-SMCs caused by a global rise in [Ca(2+)]i via a RyR-TMEM16A-VDCC signalling module sets the basal tone. Targeting this module may lead to new treatments for diseases like faecal incontinence.
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    The cellular and molecular basis of bitter tastant-induced bronchodilation

    Zhang, Cheng-Hai; Lifshitz, Lawrence M.; Uy, Karl; Ikebe, Mitsuo; Fogarty, Kevin E.; ZhuGe, Ronghua (2013-03-05)
    Bronchodilators are a standard medicine for treating airway obstructive diseases, and beta2 adrenergic receptor agonists have been the most commonly used bronchodilators since their discovery. Strikingly, activation of G-protein-coupled bitter taste receptors (TAS2Rs) in airway smooth muscle (ASM) causes a stronger bronchodilation in vitro and in vivo than beta2 agonists, implying that new and better bronchodilators could be developed. A critical step towards realizing this potential is to understand the mechanisms underlying this bronchodilation, which remain ill-defined. An influential hypothesis argues that bitter tastants generate localized Ca(2+) signals, as revealed in cultured ASM cells, to activate large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels, which in turn hyperpolarize the membrane, leading to relaxation. Here we report that in mouse primary ASM cells bitter tastants neither evoke localized Ca(2+) events nor alter spontaneous local Ca(2+) transients. Interestingly, they increase global intracellular [Ca(2+)]i, although to a much lower level than bronchoconstrictors. We show that these Ca(2+) changes in cells at rest are mediated via activation of the canonical bitter taste signaling cascade (i.e., TAS2R-gustducin-phospholipase Cbeta [PLCbeta]- inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor [IP3R]), and are not sufficient to impact airway contractility. But activation of TAS2Rs fully reverses the increase in [Ca(2+)]i induced by bronchoconstrictors, and this lowering of the [Ca(2+)]i is necessary for bitter tastant-induced ASM cell relaxation. We further show that bitter tastants inhibit L-type voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels (VDCCs), resulting in reversal in [Ca(2+)]i, and this inhibition can be prevented by pertussis toxin and G-protein betagamma subunit inhibitors, but not by the blockers of PLCbeta and IP3R. Together, we suggest that TAS2R stimulation activates two opposing Ca(2+) signaling pathways via Gbetagamma to increase [Ca(2+)]i at rest while blocking activated L-type VDCCs to induce bronchodilation of contracted ASM. We propose that the large decrease in [Ca(2+)]i caused by effective tastant bronchodilators provides an efficient cell-based screening method for identifying potent dilators from among the many thousands of available bitter tastants.
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