Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1939366 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006 | 5 Pages |
In low or absence of glucose, α-cells generate rhythmic action potentials and secrete glucagon. α-Cell T-type Ca2+ channels are believed to be pacemaker channels, which are expected to open near the resting membrane potential (around −60 mV) to initiate a small depolarization. A previous publication, however, showed that α-cell T-type Ca2+ channels have an activation threshold of −40 mV, which does not appear to fulfill their role as pacemakers. In this work, we investigated the Ca2+ channel characteristics in α-cells of mouse-insulin-promoter green-fluorescent-protein (MIP-GFP) mouse. The β-cells of MIP-GFP were conveniently distinguished as green cells, while immunostaining indicated that the majority of non-green cells were α-cells. We found that majority of α-cells possessed T-type Ca2+ channels having an activation threshold of −40 mV; these cells also had high-voltage-activated (HVA) Ca2+ channels (activation threshold of −20 mV). A novel finding here is that a minority of α-cells had T-type Ca2+ channels with an activation threshold of −60 mV. This minor population of α-cells was, surprisingly, devoid of HVA Ca2+ channels. We suggest that this α-cell subpopulation may act as pacemaker cells in low or absence of glucose.