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Showing papers by "Daniel Choquet published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
26 Jun 1992-Science
TL;DR: The insertion was not required for Fc gamma RII to modulate surface immunoglobulin-triggered B-cell activation, but did contribute to the formation of caps in response to receptor cross-linking, consistent with suggestions that the lymphocyte but not macrophage form of the receptor can associate with the detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton.
Abstract: B lymphocytes and macrophages express closely related immunoglobulin G (IgG) Fc receptors (Fc gamma RII) that differ only in the structures of their cytoplasmic domains. Because of cell type-specific alternative messenger RNA splicing, B-cell Fc gamma RII contains an insertion of 47 amino acids that participates in determining receptor function in these cells. Transfection of an Fc gamma RII-negative B-cell line with complementary DNA's encoding the two splice products and various receptor mutants indicated that the insertion was responsible for preventing both Fc gamma RII-mediated endocytosis and Fc gamma RII-mediated antigen presentation. The insertion was not required for Fc gamma RII to modulate surface immunoglobulin-triggered B-cell activation. Instead, regulation of activation involved a region of the cytoplasmic domain common to both the lymphocyte and macrophage receptor isoforms. In contrast, the insertion did contribute to the formation of caps in response to receptor cross-linking, consistent with suggestions that the lymphocyte but not macrophage form of the receptor can associate with the detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton.

467 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1992-Neuron
TL;DR: The Ca2+ permeability of a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) in the rat CNS was determined using both current and fluorescence measurements on medial habenula neurons to underscore the physiological significance of Ca2- influx through nAChr channel in the CNS.

340 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that 4-AP blocks K+ channels in their open state and that the drug remains trapped in the channel once it is closed, and it is suggested that two pathways lead from the blocked to the unblocked states.
Abstract: The mechanism by which 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) blocks the delayed rectifier type potassium (K+) channels present on lipopolysaccharide-activated murine B lymphocytes was investigated using whole-cell and single channel patch-clamp recordings. 4-AP (1 microM-5 mM) was superfused for 3-4 min before applying depolarizing pulses to activate the channel. During the first pulse after application of 4-AP above 50 microM, the current inactivated faster, as compared with the control, but its peak was only reduced at high concentrations of 4-AP (Kd = 3.1 mM). During subsequent pulses, the peak current was decreased (Kd = 120 microM), but the inactivation rate was slower than in the control, a feature that could be explained by a slow unblocking process. After washing out the drug, the current elicited by the first voltage step was still markedly reduced, as compared with the control one, and displayed very slow activation and inactivation kinetics; this suggests that the K+ channels move from a blocked to an unblocked state slowly during the depolarizing pulse. These results show that 4-AP blocks K+ channels in their open state and that the drug remains trapped in the channel once it is closed. On the basis of the analysis of the current kinetics during unblocking, we suggest that two pathways lead from the blocked to the unblocked states. Computer simulations were used to investigate the mechanism of action of 4-AP. The simulations suggest that 4-AP must bind to both an open and a nonconducting state of the channel. It is postulated that the latter is either the inactivated channel or a site on closed channels only accessible to the drug once the cell has been depolarized. Using inside- and outside-out patch recordings, we found that 4-AP only blocks channels from the intracellular side of the membrane and acts by reducing the mean burst time. 4-AP is a weak base (pK = 9), and thus exists in ionized or nonionized form. Since the Kd of channel block depends on both internal and external pH, we suggest that 4-AP crosses the membrane in its nonionized form and acts from inside the cell in its ionized form.

122 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cell activation via Fc gamma RIII requires the co‐expression of gamma‐chains, and is independent of the cytoplasmic portion of the alpha‐chain, which confers on the chimeric receptor the ability to trigger cell activation.
Abstract: Type III receptors for the Fc portion of IgG (Fc gamma RIII), initially characterized on macrophages and NK cells, are also expressed on several pre-B cell lines. Surface expression of Fc gamma RIII requires the association of the ligand binding alpha-chain with homodimeric gamma-chains. Type II Fc gamma R is homologous to Fc gamma RIII alpha-chain in the extracellular portion and differs in the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. The role of Fc gamma R in cell activation was investigated by expressing Fc gamma RIII and the lymphocyte-specific b1 isoform of Fc gamma RII (Fc gamma RIIb1) in an Fc gamma R-negative, sIgG-positive B-cell line. We found that, in contrast to Fc gamma RIIb1, Fc gamma RIII triggers the same events of cell activation as sIG i.e. Ca2+ mobilization, tyrosine phosphorylation and IL-2 secretion. By expressing cytoplasmic domain-lacking Fc gamma RIII alpha-chain in the absence or in the presence of gamma-chains, we demonstrated that cell activation via Fc gamma RIII requires the co-expression of gamma-chains, and is independent of the cytoplasmic portion of the alpha-chain. Furthermore, the cytoplasmic portion of the gamma-chain, fused to the extracellular and transmembrane domains of Fc gamma RII confers on the chimeric receptor the ability to trigger cell activation. Mutation of one tyrosine residue in the cytoplasmic domain of the gamma-chain prevented triggering of cytoplasmic signals. We therefore demonstrate that a tyrosine-containing motif, present in the cytoplasmic domain of the associated gamma-chain, is necessary and sufficient to trigger cell activation via Fc gamma RIII.

79 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The results probably reflect that during the course of activation 1) the number of voltage-dependent K+ channels per cell decreases and increases in a small subset and 2) theNumber of Ca(2+)-dependent K-dependent channels percell increases in all cells.
Abstract: The expression and characteristics of K+ channels of human B lymphocytes were studied by using single and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings They were gated by depolarization (voltage-gated potassium current, IKv, 11-20 pS) and by an increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration (calcium-activated potassium current, IKCa, 26 pS), respectively The level of expression of these channels was correlated with the activational status of the cell Both conductances are blocked by tetraethylammonium, verapamil, and charybdotoxin, and are insensitive to apamin; 4-aminopyridine blocks IK, preferentially We used a protein kinase C activator (PMA) or antibodies to membrane Ig (anti-mu) to activate resting splenocytes in culture Although IKv was recorded in the majority of the resting lymphocytic population, less than 20% of the activated cells expressed this conductance However, in this subset the magnitude of IKv was 20-fold larger than in resting cells On the other hand, IKCa was detected in nearly one half of the resting cells, whereas all activated cells expressed this current The magnitude of IKCa was, on average, 30 times larger in activated than in nonactivated cells These results probably reflect that during the course of activation 1) the number of voltage-dependent K+ channels per cell decreases and increases in a small subset and 2) the number of Ca(2+)-dependent K+ channels per cell increases in all cells We suggest that the expression of functional Ca(2+)- and voltage-activated K+ channels are under the control of different regulatory signals

64 citations