Abstract
Quantal release of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) was monitored in rat pancreatic β-cells expressing P2X2 receptors. Stimulation of exocytosis evoked rapidly activating and deactivating ATP-dependent transient inward currents (TICs). The unitary charge (q) of the events recorded at 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i averaged 4.3 pC. The distribution of the 3√q of these events could be described by a single Gaussian. The rise times averaged ∼5 ms over a wide range of TIC amplitudes. In β-cells preloaded with 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT; accumulating in insulin granules), ATP was coreleased with 5-HT during >90% of the release events. Following step elevation of [Ca2+]i to ∼5 μM by photo release of caged Ca2+, an increase in membrane capacitance was observed after 33 ms, whereas ATP release first became detectable after 43 ms. The step increase in [Ca2+]i produced an initial large TIC followed by a series of smaller events that echoed the changes in membrane capacitance (ΔC m). Mathematical modeling suggests that the large initial TIC reflects the superimposition of many unitary events. Exocytosis, measured as ΔC m or TICs, was complete within 2 s after elevation of [Ca2+]i with no sign of endocytosis masking the capacitance increase. The relationship between total charge (Q) and ΔC m was linear with a slope of ∼1.2 pC/fF. The latter value predicts a capacitance increase of 3.6 fF for the observed mean value of q, close to that expected for exocytosis of individual insulin granules. Our results indicate that measurements of ATP release and ΔC m principally (≥85–95%) report exocytosis of insulin granules.
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Introduction
Capacitance measurements and amperometry are widely used to study single-vesicle release from endocrine cells [1, 2]. Secretory cells contain both large dense core vesicles (LDCVs) and small synaptic-like microvesicles (SVs) [3]. Whole-cell capacitance measurements monitor the increase in cell surface area that occurs when the vesicular membranes are inserted into the plasma membrane. However, it is not possible to discriminate between exocytosis of SVs and LDCVs and their relative contributions to the observed changes in membrane capacitance remain unknown.
Pancreatic β-cells are electrically excitable and changes in blood glucose translate into changes of insulin secretion via electrical activity [4]. In addition to insulin-containing LDCVs, they also contain SVs [5, 6] capable of undergoing exocytosis [7]. It has been reported that there is a temporal dissociation between the increase in membrane capacitance and the detection of extracellular serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT), which is coreleased with insulin from β-cells preloaded with the amine [8–10]. Thus, some (but not all [10, 11]) studies report an early component of capacitance increase that occurs without any detectable release of serotonin. A dissociation between capacitance measurements and LDCV exocytosis studied by amperometry [12] and TIRF imaging of cargo release [13] has also been observed in chromaffin cells. Clearly, these discrepant observations have great impact on the interpretation and validity of data obtained by capacitance measurements and merit further analyses.
The insulin granules constitute an important intracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) depot [14–16]. Synaptic vesicles also contain ATP [17] but whether this also applies to the SVs in β-cells is not known. We have engineered primary rat β-cells to express purinergic ionotropic P2X2 receptors (P2X2R). These ligand-gated channels are activated by extracellular ATP [18]. Exocytosis of ATP-containing secretory vesicles can therefore be expected to transiently elevate extracellular ATP sufficiently to activate the P2X2Rs in β-cells expressing these receptors. Indeed, stimulation of exocytosis in β-cells expressing P2X2Rs is associated with large current transients [19, 20]. We have previously demonstrated that ATP is coreleased with 5-HT [21], consistent with the idea that ATP is released during exocytosis of the LDCVs. However, it remains to be determined whether ATP is also released by exocytosis of the SVs and, if this is the case, how much of the observed capacitance increase reflects fusion of such vesicles with the membrane.
Here, we confirm that ATP is coreleased with the insulin granule marker 5-HT preloaded into pancreatic β-cells. We further demonstrate that the amplitude distribution of the ATP-induced current transients and kinetics of these events are consistent with the release of a single class of vesicles. Finally, we show that ATP and serotonin are released in parallel with exocytosis detected as increases in membrane capacitance and that there is no temporal dissociation between the processes. We conclude that capacitance increases in rat β-cells upon stimulation of exocytosis principally reflect exocytosis of insulin-containing LDCVs.
Results
P2X2R-based detection of extracellular ATP
Rat pancreatic β-cells were infected with ionotropic P2X2Rs. Secretory vesicles in a variety of secretory cells including β-cells contain ATP [15, 16, 22]. Exocytosis of insulin granules will therefore be associated with the corelease of ATP [7, 23] and result in transient inward currents (TICs). Importantly, exocytotic ATP release will activate P2X2Rs and give rise to TICs regardless of the location of the release events (Fig. 1a). By contrast, measurements of exocytosis by amperometry only detect events that occur close to the carbon fiber [21].
In successfully infected β-cells (as judged by green fluorescent protein (GFP) fluorescence) held at −70 mV, application of 100 μM ATP elicited an inward current with a peak amplitude (I) averaging 5.1 ± 0.5 nA (n = 19; Fig. 1b; trace ii); no ATP-activated currents were observed in noninfected β-cells (n = 17; Fig. 1b, trace i). The spontaneous decline in the amplitude during the application is due to slow (τ > 5 s) desensitization of the receptors. At −70 mV, the P2X2R single-channel amplitude (i) is ∼1 pA [24]. The open probability (P o) of the channel at a maximally activating concentration of ATP has been reported to be ∼0.6 [25]. The number of receptors per cell (N) can be estimated from the relationship N = I/(i × P o ). Using the above values of I, P o , and i, N can thus be estimated to be ∼8,500. The cell capacitance averaged 10.6 ± 1.0 pF (n = 19). Since the specific membrane capacitance is ∼10 fF μm−2 [26], the above value of N corresponds to a receptor density of 80 μm−2. This predicts an average distance between two adjacent receptors of 0.11 μm.
Exocytosis detected by the P2X2R-based assay
Figure 1c shows recordings of ATP-induced TICs when exocytosis was stimulated by intracellular dialysis with a buffer containing 0.2 μM Ca2+(i) and 2 μM Ca2+ in the absence (ii) and presence (iii) of 0.1 mM cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). These events were suppressed by suramin (50 μM), confirming that they are due to activation of P2X2Rs (not shown). The P2X2Rs respond principally to extracellular ATP and to a much lesser extent to adenosine monophosphate [27]. The frequency of the TICs averaged 9 ± 1 min−1 (n = 8) at 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i, 37 ± 4 min−1 at 2 μM [Ca2+]i alone (n = 7; P< 0.001 vs. the lower Ca2+ concentration) and 69 ± 8 min−1 at the higher [Ca2+]i and in the presence of 100 μM cAMP (n = 6: P < 0.001 vs. 2 μM Ca2+ alone).
Figure 1d shows the cumulative charge (ΣQ) displayed against time after establishment of the whole-cell configuration. Increasing [Ca2+]i from 0.2 to 2 μM stimulated exocytosis approximately fourfold (from 185 to 700 pC). The inclusion of 100 μM cAMP in the intracellular medium resulted in a further sixfold enhancement of exocytosis. The average unitary event size (q) was estimated by dividing ΣQ by the observed number of events. It averaged 4.3 ± 0.4 pC (n = 8) and 5.3 ± 0.6 (n = 8) at 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i in the absence and presence of 100 μM cAMP, respectively. At the tenfold higher [Ca2+]i, q averaged 6.6 ± 0.5 pC (n = 5; P < 0.05 vs. 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i) under control conditions and 19.2 ± 4.2 pC (n = 5) in the presence of 100 μM intracellular cAMP (P < 0.05 vs. 2 μM [Ca2+]i alone). The latter effect is reminiscent of the approximately fivefold increase in the amplitude and charge of the exocytotic events previously documented by amperometry in mouse β-cells following elevation of intracellular cAMP levels by activation of adenylate cyclase by forskolin [9].
Properties of quantal ATP release in β-cells
At 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i, the frequency of the TICs is low enough to allow the resolution of the individual events. Figure 2a shows the distribution of the 3√q values. It can be described by a single Gaussian. The mean charge \(\left( {\bar q} \right)\) of these events was 4.3 ± 0.3 pC. The peak amplitude and the charge of the smallest events (i.e., those in the leftmost bin) averaged 8 ± 1 pA and 52 ± 3 fC (n = 11). The latter value corresponds to a 3√q of 3.7 fC1/3. The inset in Fig. 2a shows the five smallest events with the baseline RMS noise given above the traces. The smallest event we observed had an amplitude of 3.2 pA and a charge of 33.4 fC. It is difficult to resolve the individual events at higher [Ca2+]i because of superimposition of individual events. However, even at the highest [Ca2+]i (20 μM), <4% of the events had 3√q values <4 fC1/3 (not shown).
We characterized the TICs further by measuring the rise times (i.e., the time it takes to go from 10% to 90% of the peak amplitude) of the events observed at 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i. These data are displayed against 3√q in Fig. 2b. This analysis revealed that the rise time was constant and ∼5 ms for 3√q values of ≤25 fC1/3 (≤15.6 pC).
Parallel release of ATP and 5-HT
Exocytosis of insulin-containing LDCVs can be studied by amperometry following preloading of the β-cell and the LDCVs with 5-HT [8]. Figure 3a shows parallel recordings of ATP (black trace) and 5-HT release (red trace). Exocytosis was elicited by intracellular dialysis of 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i and 100 μM cAMP. In a series of five experiments, 92 ± 6% of the release events detected by amperometry associated with simultaneous ATP release. ATP-dependent TICs not associated with 5-HT release represent events occurring too far away from the carbon fiber to be detected. We compared the half-widths of the amperometric events (excluding events with rise times of >10 ms that likely occurred far away from the carbon fiber) with the half-widths of the TICs. Figure 3b shows a TIC superimposed on the corresponding simultaneous amperometric event. The half-widths of events detected by both methods averaged 15 ± 1 and 20 ± 0.5 ms (n = 93) for the amperometric and TIC events, respectively.
Figure 3c shows the distribution of 3√q values for all TICs (gray) and the subset of events (56% in this experiment) that were associated with simultaneous 5-HT release (red). The amplitude of both types of events exhibited close to normal distribution. Whereas it can be seen that >70% of the ATP-dependent TICs are associated with detectable corelease of 5-HT for 3√q values >20 fC1/3, the correlation is weaker for smaller events (28% for 3√q values <8 fC1/3). However, when the effects of amplitude and diffusional loss of 5-HT were taken into account (stippled bars; see “Materials and methods”), the distributions of TICs with and without simultaneous 5-HT release became more similar. Thus, both the location and amplitude of the release events influence the detection of the amperometric events.
Correlation between ATP release and exocytosis detected by capacitance measurements
Exocytosis in β-cells is normally triggered by Ca2+ entry during glucose-induced action potentials. Because of the strongly inwardly rectifying properties of the P2X2Rs [24], the TICs become small and difficult to resolve during membrane depolarization. The time course of Ca2+-induced exocytosis and ATP release was therefore instead determined by photoliberation of caged Ca2+ (Ca2+—NP-EGTA). Using this approach, exocytosis can proceed even when the membrane potential is held constant at −70 mV (Fig. 4a). In a series of 37 experiments carried out on 22 cells, in which [Ca2+]i rose to 5.3 ± 0.5 μM, the first TIC spike started on average 43 ± 7 ms (n = 37) after the flash. This is only slightly longer than delay between photo release of Ca2+ and a detectable increase in membrane capacitance which averaged 31 ± 3 ms (n = 9) in β-cells not infected with P2X2Rs. Noninfected β-cells were used for the latter measurement as time course of the capacitance increase cannot be reliably determined in infected cells because of the large increase in membrane conductance resulting from activation of the P2X2Rs that leaks through to the capacitance signal. Figure 4b shows examples of TICs upon photoliberation in another four β-cells. Typically, a step increase in [Ca2+]i elicited an initial large TIC spike followed by a series of smaller events. In some cases, individual events were superimposed on the large spike.
ATP release correlated with an increase in membrane capacitance (ΔC m). The increase in membrane capacitance was measured once the membrane current had decayed by >95% and the capacitance signal was stable and averaged 105 ± 13 fF (n = 22). The total integrated TIC (ΣQ) measured over the same period (545 ± 49 ms) and in the same experiments averaged 139 ± 19 pC. When multiple experiments were done on the same cell, the mean values of ΔC m and ΣQ obtained were used for this analysis.
Figure 4c summarizes the relationship between Q and ΔC m in 37 experiments. It can be seen that the Q is linearly related to ΔC m (r = 0.8; P < 0.001). The relationship has a slope of 1.2 ± 0.2 pC/fF.
Spontaneous TICs were sometimes observed before photo releasing Ca2+. The distribution of 3√q values of such events is shown in Fig. 4d. The distribution can be described by a single Gaussian. The mean charge \(\left( {\bar q} \right)\) of these events was 4.2 ± 0.4 pC. Combining this value with the slope of 1.2 pC/fF suggests a unitary capacitance increase of 3.5 fF. This is within 21% of that observed for LDCV exocytosis in on-cell capacitance measurements (2.9 fF; [7]).
Modeling of ATP release
We attribute the initial large spike observed following photo release of Ca2+ to the rapid release of many vesicles and superimposition of the associated TICs. We evaluated this by mathematical modeling. Figure 5a shows the capacitance change evoked in a representative β-cell following photo release of caged Ca2+. In this cell, a capacitance increase of 130 fF took place within the first 0.2 s after the flash of UV light. This corresponds to the release of 45 LDCVs with a unitary capacitance increase of 2.9 fF. Exocytosis just after the flash is so rapid that the modeled events merge into what appears as a single large transient and that individual events superimposed on the large spike only become discernible when the current starts returning towards the baseline (compare Fig. 4b). Figure 5b compares the time courses of the capacitance increase (red trace) and the cumulative Q of the simulated response in Fig. 5a (black trace). The increase in membrane capacitance and cumulative Q were half-maximal after 55 and 152 ms, respectively.
In Fig. 5c, the average changes in membrane capacitance (ΔC m) observed in a series of nine cells not expressing P2X2Rs following a step elevation of [Ca2+]i are shown (red trace). It is evident that there is a prompt increase in membrane capacitance of 170 ± 23 fF, that the signal stabilizes at a new plateau within ∼2 s, and that there is no sign of ongoing exocytosis or endocytosis during the following 8 s. We compared the time courses of the increase in membrane capacitance with that of ATP released as reported by the TIC measurements. The black trace in Fig. 5d shows the integrated average charge (ΣQ) over the first 10 s after photoliberation of Ca2+ in the five cells shown in Fig. 4a, b. It can be seen that both ΔC m and ΣQ plateau within ∼2 s and then remained stable. Figure 5d shows the responses evoked by the flash on an expanded time base. Whereas ΣQ (reflecting ATP release) was half-maximal after 347 ± 168 ms (n = 5), the corresponding value was 59 ± 5 ms (n = 9) for ΔC m.
Parallel measurements of exocytosis using amperometry, P2X2Rs, and capacitance measurements
We examined the correlation between the capacitance increase and the release of ATP and the LDCV marker 5-HT. Figure 6a shows an example where elevation of [Ca2+]i to ∼10 μM evoked a large capacitance increase (∼700 fF), a prominent and protracted amperometric response, and a series of TICs with a total charge of 416 pC. The responses in this cell are atypically large; the average capacitance increase and integrated TIC evoked by photoliberation of Ca2+ in this series of experiments averaged 204 ± 72 fF and 239 ± 57 pC (n = 8), respectively. Figure 6b shows parallel amperometric and TIC recordings of the same type in another three cells. Figure 6c compares the time courses of the compound (resulting from the simultaneous fusion of many events) amperometric and TIC response. Consistent with the data of Fig. 3b, the TIC develops with the same time course as the amperometric response but the duration of the event is longer.
We point out that UV irradiation of the carbon fiber gives rise to a current artifact that had to be removed digitally off-line. Figure 6d illustrates the validity of this procedure. Here, the artifactual response obtained when the cell was removed from the carbon fiber is shown together with the exponential used for subtraction. The lower trace shows the near-complete removal of the artifact.
In Fig. 6e, the average time courses of 5-HT and ATP release are compared in the four cells shown in Fig. 6a, b. In these cells, the integrated amperometric response and TIC were half-maximal at 139 ± 125 and 289 ± 129 ms (n = 4), respectively.
Discussion
Here, we have used adenoviral infection of rat pancreatic β-cells to induce expression of a high density of ATP-sensitive P2X2Rs in the plasma membrane to measure ATP release. Our technique is related to the “sniffer cell” approach, also based on P2X2 receptors, used previously by Hazama et al. [28] with the difference that the β-cell releasing ATP is used as its own “sniffer” cell. An advantage of this method over amperometry is that exocytosis can be monitored in the entire cell whereas amperometry only detects secretion in the 30–50% of the area adjacent to the carbon fiber [23]. We have used this protocol to address two important questions in β-cell exocytosis. First, is ATP exclusively released by exocytosis of LDCVs? Second, how much of the depolarization-evoked exocytotic responses reported by capacitance measurements reflect fusion of LDCVs?
ATP is released by exocytosis of vesicles that also accumulate 5-HT
Fluorescence microscopy, autoradiography, electron microscopy, and ultrastructural histochemistry indicate that 5-HT accumulates in insulin-containing secretory vesicles of the β-cell during preloading [29–31]. The validity of amperometry to study exocytosis of insulin-containing granules has been demonstrated [8]. Even if 5-HT accumulated in the SVs, the currents that would result from exocytosis of SVs loaded with the amine would be expected to be very small given the small volume of these vesicles (2% of that of an insulin granule as predicted from the diameters of 90 and 330 nm; [6]). There is a good correlation between 5-HT and ATP release and 92% of the events detected by amperometry were paralleled by a TIC. The fact that not all amperometric events are associated with ATP release can be explained by uneven loading of the vesicles with ATP and/or insufficient expansion of the fusion pore to allow the exit of ATP which is bigger than 5-HT. The latter possibility is suggested by analysis of the pedestals that sometimes precede full fusion and that are believed to reflect release via fusion pore. Although pedestals are observed in both amperometry and TIC recordings, their relative amplitude is much smaller during the latter type of measurements [23].
The parallel recordings of ATP and 5-HT release suggested the existence of a population of small TICs that did not associate with detectable corelease of serotonin (Fig. 3). It may be argued that these events reflect exocytosis of SVs that do not accumulate 5-HT. However, we do not think this is the case but rather a consequence of the lower resolution of amperometry: some events associated with the release of 5-HT will not be detected by the carbon fiber because they are too small and/or occur too far away from the carbon fiber. Indeed, when the distribution was corrected for the greater sensitivity of the P2X2R-based technique and diffusional loss of 5-HT, a better agreement of the distributions was obtained. Collectively, these data argue that ATP and 5-HT are released by exocytosis of the same type of vesicles and that these are the insulin-containing LDCVs. It therefore appears that ATP should represent a good endogenous marker of insulin granule exocytosis that, unlike 5-HT, does not have to be preloaded into the cells. TIC measurements also have the advantage that they allow the time course of ATP release elicited by photo release of caged Ca2+ without subtraction of the current artifact that results from UV irradiation (see Fig. 6d). However, this is at the price of not being able to correlate ATP release with the time course of vesicle fusion as documented by changes in membrane capacitance as the large conductance changes associated with the activation of the P2X2Rs contaminate the capacitance signal.
Sensitivity of the P2X2R-based method for detection of exocytosis
The smallest TICs we resolved had a peak amplitude as small as 3.2 pA. Under the conditions used in these experiments, the P2X2R single-channel amplitude is ∼1 pA [24]. Thus, the smallest events involve the activation of only a few P2X2Rs. It is of interest that the rise times for the smallest events are as short as for larger events (Fig. 2b). This argues that they reflect local release of ATP and rapid opening of P2X2Rs and that their activation does not involve diffusion over long distances. The smallest event observed had a charge of 33 fC, 0.7% of the mean charge (4.3 pC). Pancreatic β-cells contain 4 fmol of ATP per cell [22] of which 30% is stored in the ∼10,000 insulin-containing secretory granules [14]. Thus, the ATP content per granule is 0.12 amol (1.2 × 10−19 mol). Combining these values suggest that our technique can detect the release of 0.85 × 10−21 mol of ATP (∼500 molecules). This would correspond to an intravesicular concentration of 0.2 mM in an SV with a diameter of 90 nm and a volume of 0.4 al. This is several orders of magnitude lower than the estimated ATP concentration in classical synaptic vesicles [17]. This argues that our technique should have sufficient sensitivity to detect any SV-mediated ATP release in β-cells.
Do SVs contribute to the observed capacitance increases?
If the total number of SVs and LDCVs undergoing exocytosis is equivalent to a and b, respectively, the total charge (Q) of the ATP-evoked current and increase in membrane capacitance (ΔC m) are given by the equations
Single-vesicle capacitance increases for SVs (c m, sv ) and LDCVs (c m, ldcv ) average 0.2 and 2.9 fF, respectively [7]. Whereas the unitary charge of the current associated with the ATP release during exocytosis of an LDCV (q LDCV) is ∼4.3 pC (Figs. 2a and 4a), the unitary charge evoked by ATP release due to exocytosis of SVs (q sv ) is not known. We therefore consider three possibilities: (1) SVs contain no ATP at all (i.e., q sv = 0); (2) SVs contain ATP at the same concentration as the LDCVs but, because the volume of an SV is only 2% of the LDCVs, the amount of ATP released during SV exocytosis will be correspondingly reduced (i.e., q sv = 0.02 × q ldcv ); and (3) SVs contain ATP at a ∼50-fold higher concentration than the LDCVs so that exactly the same amount of ATP is delivered during exocytosis of SVs and LDCVs (q slmv = q ldcv ). We point out that cases (1) and (3) are consistent with the single peak in the amplitude distribution (Fig. 2a) and the rise times being constant for a wide range of TIC amplitudes (cf. [32]). However, case (2) is not supported by the experimental data. If SVs contained ATP at the same concentration as the LDCVs and if they are released at a rate comparable to that of the LDCVs as suggested by on-cell capacitance measurements [7], then a second peak should appear at 3.6–4.5 fC1/3 in the histogram shown in Fig. 2a. However, no such peak was observed. Likewise, the analysis of the rise times provided no evidence for two distinct release pathways characterized by different time courses for ATP release as would be expected for vesicles with widely different diameters [32].
With the experimentally observed values of ΔC m and Q (105 fF and 139 pC), solving Eqs. 1 and 2 yields values for b and a of 32 and 56 for case 1 (q SV = 0), 30 and 87 for case 2 (q SV = 0.02 × qLDCV), and 36 and 0 for case 3 (q SV = q LDCV). These values indicate that exocytosis of LDCV accounts for >95% of the ATP release and >85% of the observed capacitance increases. The conclusion that the capacitance changes and TICs principally reflect exocytosis of LDCVs is also consistent with the previous finding that the capacitance increase per TIC is ∼3 fF [21]. The fact that a similar capacitance increase per event (3.5 fF; Fig. 4c) can be estimated from the relationship between charge and capacitance increase in the experiments involving photo release of caged Ca2+ provides further support of this idea. We acknowledge that this analysis rests on the assumption that the spontaneous miniature events have the same q as those that are triggered by uncaging of Ca2+. The validity of the assumption is supported by the finding that the amplitude distribution of the TICs in excised outside patches at 2 μM [Ca2+]i is the same as that seen in whole-cell recordings at 0.2 µM [Ca2+]i (Hoppa et al., submitted manuscript).
The above analysis depends critically on the accuracy of the capacitance measurements. Changes in cell capacitance reflect the balance between the insertion of membrane during exocytosis and its recapture by endocytosis. Endocytosis is triggered with a delay after exocytosis and operates at much lower rate than exocytosis [33]. Several precautions were taken to minimize potential confounding effects of endocytosis. First, ΔC m was measured as soon as the TICs had returned to the baseline. Second, we used moderate stimulus (peak [Ca2+]i ∼ 5 μM; compare [34]). Indeed, the capacitance measurements showed little sign of endocytosis and ΔC m attained a new and stable plateau within ∼1 s where it subsequently remained for at least 9 s. The integrated TIC charge likewise increased to a plateau within 1 s and there was no sign of ongoing exocytosis during the subsequent 9 s. These observations suggest that ΔC m is not masked by ongoing endocytosis and that we accordingly do not underestimate the true extent of exocytosis. In this context, it may also be relevant that endocytosis is poorly preserved during standard whole-cell recordings [33, 35].
Temporal dissociation between capacitance increase and ATP release
Interestingly, there was a 300-ms delay between ΔC m and ΣQ (Fig. 5b). There is a simple explanation to this delay. Whereas the capacitance increase occurs almost instantaneously upon exocytosis, the P2X2R currents activate with some delay (∼5 ms; Fig. 2b) upon exposure to ATP and then decay exponentially as the agonist diffuses away from the release site. Thus, ΣQ will plateau once the channels have deactivated and this may, depending on the amplitude and time course of the exocytotic response, take several hundred milliseconds (see Fig. 5d). Thus, it is only natural that the integrated current lags behind ΔC m and the dissociation is therefore not indicative of the exocytosis of vesicles containing or lacking ATP. A similar argument can be construed to explain why the integrated TIC lags somewhat behind the amperometric response.
Comparison with previous work
We acknowledge that the low rate of SV exocytosis suggested by our analysis contrasts with data obtained by two-photon extracellular polar-tracer image quantification which suggest release rates as high as 4,000 SVs (20% increase in FM1-43 fluorescence in 0.3 s) [36], i.e., ∼45-fold higher than the rate we observe (maximally 87 SVs over ∼550 ms as in case 2 above). The functional significance of SV exocytosis is unclear. Although it was originally believed that they could mediate gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) release [5], more recent analysis suggests that most exocytotic release of GABA principally occurs during release of the insulin granules [23]. The present data also appear to exclude a role of the SVs in ATP release. The identity of the compound released during SV exocytosis (if any) therefore remains to be determined. It is even possible that SV exocytosis does not at all subserve a function in the export of molecules into the islet interstitium. Instead, rapid exocytosis and endocytosis of SV may provide the β-cell with a means of dynamic regulation of the cell’s surface area or a mechanism for insertion of essential transmembrane proteins into the plasma membrane. Yet another possibility is that it is part of a membrane repair reaction [37]. Further work combining measurements of exocytosis by capacitance and TIC measurements with optical imaging of exocytosis are likely to be helpful in the exploration of these questions.
Materials and methods
Adenovirus construction
AdP2X2R-GFP was created using Adeno-X™ Expression system (BD Biosciences Clontech, Erembodegem, Belgium). In short, cDNA encoding the rat P2X2R linked to GFP (kindly provided by B.S. Khakh, Cambridge, UK) was subcloned into a pShuttle vector. The expression cassette was then excised using PI-Sce and I-Ceu I and ligated into pAdeno-X, and the resulting adenoviral DNA was transfected into HEK293 cells for harvesting.
β-cell preparation and infection
Pancreatic islets were isolated from Sprague-Dawley or Wistar rats. The animals were sacrificed by CO2 inhalation (slowly increasing the concentration of CO2). The pancreas was quickly excised and pancreatic islets were isolated by collagenase digestion. The islets thus obtained were dissociated into single cells by titration in Ca2+ free, and the resulting cell suspension was plated on Petri dishes. The cells were maintained in tissue culture for up to 2 days in RPMI 1640 medium (10 mM glucose; Gibco BRL) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, 100 μg/ml streptomycin, and penicillin (100 i.u./ml). The β-cells were infected with the adenoviral construct of P2X2R-GFP once they had attached to the bottom of the culture dish. Four to 6 h after infection, the culture medium was replaced with fresh medium without the virus. The cells were used for experimental analysis 24–36 h after infection.
Solutions
During the experiment, the cells were continuously superfused with extracellular solution containing 138 mM NaCl, 5.6 mM KCl, 2.6 mM CaCl2, 1.2 mM MgCl2, 5 mM HEPES, 5 mM d-glucose. The pH of the medium was adjusted to 7.4 with NaOH. The osmolarity of the medium was ∼290 mOsm. In the experiments in which exocytosis was triggered by intracellular dialysis, the 0.2 μM [Ca2+]i media contained 110 mM Cs-glutamate (110 mM glutamic acid + 110 mM CsOH), 10 mM KCl, 10 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 3 mM MgATP, 0.1 mM cAMP, 5 mM HEPES, 5 mM CaCl2, and 10 mM EGTA, whereas the ∼2 μM [Ca2+]i buffer consisted of 3 mM MgATP, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM cAMP, 10 mM HEPES, 120 mM Cs-glutamate, 10 mM KCl, 10 mM NaCl, 5 mM HEDTA, and 0.57 mM CaCl2. In all cases, pH was adjusted to 7.1 using CsOH. The free Ca2+ concentration was estimated using the MAXC32 software (http://www.stanford.edu/∼cpatton/maxc.html).
Electrophysiology
Patch electrodes (4–7-MΩ resistance when filled with the pipette solution) were pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries (Hilgenberg, Malsfeld, Germany). The electrodes were coated with Sylgard close to the tips and fire-polished. The electrophysiological measurements were made using an EPC-10 patch clamp amplifier and Pulse 8.51 software (Heka Elektronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany). All experiments were conducted using the standard whole-cell configuration at ∼+34°C. The cells were voltage-clamped at −70 mV to prevent activation of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. Exocytosis was elicited by Ca2+ infusion through patch electrode or by photo release of caged Ca2+ and the changes of capacitance caused by the fusion of secreted vesicles with the cell membrane was detected using Sine+DC method of the Pulse Lockin module. The measurements were made using an EPC-10 patch clamp amplifier and Pulse 8.51 software (Heka Elektronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany). The ATP-activated currents were filtered at 3.33 kHz and digitized at 10 kHz. When ATP release measurements were combined with recordings of membrane capacitance, the current transients were (for display purposes) filtered at 100 Hz to remove the current noise that results from the sine wave applied to measure membrane capacitance. ATP was applied using a nanoliter injector (Nanoliter 2000, World Precision Instruments, USA) with a speed of 23 nl/s. The total volume applied was 50.6 nl. All experiments were conducted on isolated β-cells far away from neighbors to ensure that currents measured reflect events in the patch-clamped cell only. In addition, the extracellular medium contained a low (5 mM) glucose concentration to prevent spontaneous action potential firing (and exocytosis) in the nonclamped cells. Successfully infected cells were identified by the presence of GFP fluorescence.
Amperometry
For amperometry, β-cells were loaded with serotonin by adding 0.5 mM 5-HT and 0.5 mM 5-HTP (both from Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) to the cell culture >4 h before the experiment. A carbon fiber (tip diameter 5 μm; ProCFE, Dagan Corp., Minneapolis, MN, USA) was connected to the second headstage of an EPC-9/2 amplifier (Heka Elektronik, Lambrecht, Germany) and held at +650 mV; the other headstage was used for the measurements of ATP release and membrane capacitance. The carbon fiber was positioned in the immediate vicinity of the β-cell. The amperometric currents were filtered at 0.3 kHz and digitized at 1 kHz. The events were identified by visual inspection of the recording. Their amplitude typically was less than fourfold higher than the background noise level. UV illumination gave rise to transient current artifacts that we removed digitally off-line by fitting an exponential to the initial part of the current and subtracting it from the current response observed as outlined in Fig. 6d.
Photo release of caged Ca2+ and [Ca2+]i measurements
Photolysis of the Ca2+-NP-EGTA complex was effected by brief (∼1 ms) flashes of UV light produced by a JML-C2 flash photolysis apparatus (Rapp OptoElectronic, Hamburg, Germany). Photolysis was in most cases effected via the objective with the help of a custom-made spot illumination adaptor (Rapp OptoElectronic) mounted on an Axiovert 200 microscope (Carl Zeiss, Göettingen, Germany). For these experiments, the cells were plated on quartz glass coverslips (UQG Optics, Cambridge, UK) to minimize loss of UV light. The intracellular buffer for flash photolysis experiments contained 110 mM CsCl, 10 mM KCl, 10 mM NaCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, 25 mM HEPES, 3 mM MgATP, 0.1 mM cAMP, 3 mM NP-EGTA (o-nitrophenyl EGTA, tetrapotassium salt; Synaptic Systems GmbH, Göettingen, Germany), and 0.05 mM of the fluorescent low-affinity Ca2+ indicator Fura-FF (Invitrogen). The measurements were made using an epifluorescence imaging system (PTI Fluorescent Master Systems, NJ, USA). The excitation and emission wavelengths used for Fura-FF were 340/380 and >505 nm, respectively. To convert the fluorescence ratio into [Ca2+]i, the minimum ratio was determined at basal [Ca2+]i for each experiment. The maximum ratio was recorded immediately after rupturing the cell, by briefly clamping the membrane voltage to +500 mV. The K d for the binding of Ca2+ to Fura-FF was assumed as 5.5 μM (http://probes.invitrogen.com/).
Correction of histograms for diffusion of ATP
The P2X2-receptor-based technique we have used in this study allows detection of exocytosis over the entire cell surface. By contrast, amperometry principally detects exocytosis in the close vicinity to the carbon fiber and both the time course and amplitude of events occurring in other parts of the cell will be distorted by diffusion (Fig. 1a). This complicates the comparison of histograms that include all ATP-dependent TICs with those that only include events that associated with corelease of 5-HT as detected by amperometry (Fig. 3). Inevitably, small events will be filtered out with a resultant selection bias towards larger events.
The attenuation and delay of amperometric events caused by the diffusion of released molecules to the carbon fiber have previously been analyzed in detail by Haller et al. [12] using Monte Carlo methods. We used the results presented in Table 1 of that study and the original distribution of all ATP-dependent TICs (gray bars in Fig. 3b) to predict the distribution had the events instead been detected by an ATP-sensitive amperometric sensor detecting ATP in only part of the cell. To this end, the observed TICs were randomly assigned to 11 classes of release sites taking into account probabilities for events to happen at these sites (probabilities and classes of events as in [12]). The events were then scaled for the charge lost due to diffusion and their amplitudes corrected according to expected calculated half-widths. In this step, it was assumed that the current transient can be approximated by an exponential with an area below it equal to a product of the spike amplitude and the half-width of the spike. Then, all original events were sorted in descending order according to corrected amplitudes. Finally, the histogram of ATP events that should be detected by the carbon fiber was constructed from the n first sorted events, where n is the number of ATP events that coincide with amperometric transients. The remaining events obviously were of an amplitude below the detection level of the equipment used and were not included in the corrected histogram.
Mathematical simulation of ATP release
A unitary spike (amplitude ∼100 pA with a rise time of 5 ms and a half-width of 18 ms) was used to simulate the current response elicited by ATP release following photo release of caged Ca2+ and stimulation of exocytosis. Experimentally observed spikes vary in size and kinetics. Therefore, the amplitude and half-width of the spikes were varied between 50–200 pA and 16–22 ms, respectively. Following the UV flash and the stimulation of exocytosis, 45 granules (corresponding to a capacitance increase of 130 fF) were released at exponentially increasing times with a t 1/2 of 55 ms.
Data analysis and statistical evaluation
The current transients were analyzed using the Mini Analysis Program 6.0.3 (Synaptosoft, USA) to determine the peak amplitude, charge, and rise time (10–90% of the amplitude). An event was identified as an excursion from the baseline three times the RMS noise (on average 2 ± 1 pA; n = 25).
The magnitude of an event (determined as the charge q of the current resulting from an exocytotic event) will depend on the amount of ATP released. The latter parameter is given by the product of the intragranular concentration of ATP and the volume of the granule (i.e., \({{{\text{4 $ \pi $ }}r^{\text{3}} } \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{{\text{4 $ \pi $ }}r^{\text{3}} } {\text{3}}}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {\text{3}}}\)). Electron microscopy has established that the radii of both the SVs and LDCVs are normally distributed [6]. The cubic root of the charge should also be normally distributed and the data are accordingly presented as 3√q in Figs. 1, 2, and 3. The ATP concentration within the vesicles is also likely to be normally distributed but the product of two normal distributions (i.e., the ATP content and thus 3√q) remains a normal distribution although the spread (coefficient of variation) will be greater.
Unless otherwise indicated, data are quoted as mean values ± SEM of the indicated number of experiments. Statistical significances for the observed differences were evaluated by Student’s t test.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Dr Baljit S. Khakh for generously providing the P2X2-GFP construct and financial support was obtained from the Wellcome Trust, the European Union (LSHB-CT-2004-005137 and LSHM-CT-2006-518153). PR is a Wolfson-Royal Society Merit Award Research Fellow.
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Karanauskaite, J., Hoppa, M.B., Braun, M. et al. Quantal ATP release in rat β-cells by exocytosis of insulin-containing LDCVs. Pflugers Arch - Eur J Physiol 458, 389–401 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00424-008-0610-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00424-008-0610-6