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Title

Role of Ca<sup>2 </sup> in pancreatic cell death induced by alcohol metabolites.

Authors

Criddle, David N; Sutton, Robert; Petersen, Ole H

Abstract

Whereas alcohol itself, even in high concentrations, has little effect on the functional performance of isolated pancreatic acinar cells, non-oxidative metabolites (fatty acid ethyl esters [FAEE] and fatty acids [FA]) can cause Ca2 -dependent necrosis. The mechanism of action of FAEE has been investigated using a combination of patch clamp whole-cell current recording and Ca2 imaging. At low stimulation intensities, FAEE evoke repetitive short-lasting cytosolic Ca2 spikes, which are inhibited by caffeine, used as an inositol trisphosphate receptor antagonist. With more intense stimulation, sustained elevations of the cytosolic Ca2 concentration are observed, which can be prevented by pharmacological inhibition of the conversion of FAEE to FA. It is therefore the FA and not the FAEE that cause necrosis. The effect of FA cannot be blocked by inositol trisphosphate receptor antagonists. Fatty acids elicit a marked reduction in the cytosolic adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level. The patch clamp experiments show that the toxic sustained Ca2 signal generation induced by FA can be prevented by adding ATP to the cell interior. The toxic alcohol effects are principally due to FAEE produced under non-oxidative conditions and their subsequent conversion to FA. The FA-induced necrosis is Ca2 -dependent. The destructive sustained Ca2 signals are due to inhibition of mitochondrial function with failure of ATP generation.

Subjects

PANCREATIC acinar cells; PANCREAS; CELL death; ADENOSINE triphosphate; ALCOHOL; FATTY acids; NECROSIS

Publication

Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2006, Vol 21, pS14

ISSN

0815-9319

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/j.1440-1746.2006.04577.x

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