INVITED REVIEW
Ionic mechanisms and Ca2+ regulation in airway smooth muscle contraction: do the data contradict dogma?

Luke J. Janssen

Asthma Research Group, Firestone Institute for Respiratory Health, St. Joseph's Hospital; and Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8N 4A6


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In general, excitation-contraction coupling in muscle is dependent on membrane depolarization and hyperpolarization to regulate the opening of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and, thereby, influence intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). Thus Ca2+ channel blockers and K+ channel openers are important tools in the arsenals against hypertension, stroke, and myocardial infarction, etc. Airway smooth muscle (ASM) also exhibits robust Ca2+, K+, and Cl- currents, and there are elaborate signaling pathways that regulate them. It is easy, then, to presume that these also play a central role in contraction/relaxation of ASM. However, several lines of evidence speak to the contrary. Also, too many researchers in the ASM field view the sarcoplasmic reticulum as being centrally located and displacing its contents uniformly throughout the cell, and they have focused almost exclusively on the initial single [Ca2+] spike evoked by excitatory agonists. Several recent studies have revealed complex spatial and temporal heterogeneity in [Ca2+]i, the significance of which is only just beginning to be appreciated. In this review, we will compare what is known about ion channels in ASM with what is believed to be their roles in ASM physiology. Also, we will examine some novel ionic mechanisms in the context of Ca2+ handling and excitation-contraction coupling in ASM.

excitation-contraction coupling; ion channels; membrane potential


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AIRWAY HYPERREACTIVITY and variable airflow obstruction are key features of asthma. Indeed, one might say these are its most clinically relevant features. For this reason, it is essential to have a good understanding of the mechanisms underlying excitation-contraction (EC) coupling in airway smooth muscle (ASM). A great deal of research is being focused on the electrophysiology of ASM, given the importance of ion channels in EC coupling in other muscle types. The goal of this review is to stimulate a reevaluation of the existing literature on the electrophysiology of ASM as it pertains to EC coupling, with a view to redirect those research efforts.

Contraction in smooth muscle is a product of the interaction between actin and myosin, as described by the classic sliding filament theory. The degree of this interaction is determined by the net level of phosphorylation of the 20-kDa myosin light chain, which, in turn, is dependent on the relative activities of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP). MLCK is activated by Ca2+/calmodulin. Thus, in general, bronchoconstrictors act by elevating intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) to increase MLCK activity and/or by decreasing MLCP activity (which effectively increases the Ca2+ sensitivity of the contractile apparatus). Bronchodilators, on the other hand, generally produce the opposite effects. A more complete description of the interactions between actin, myosin, MLCK, and MLCP is beyond the scope of this review but can be found elsewhere (87, 209-212).


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EC coupling in nonairway muscles: adequate models for ASM? In striated muscles as well as vascular and gastrointestinal smooth muscle, EC coupling is largely dependent on membrane depolarization, although for very different reasons.

In cardiac muscle, Na+ channel opening depolarizes the membrane, resulting in Ca2+ entry via voltage-dependent ("L-type") Ca2+ channels, producing a transient elevation of [Ca2+]i immediately under the plasmalemma (17). This initial rise in [Ca2+]i does not trigger contraction directly: instead, it activates ryanodine receptors on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), causing a massive discharge of Ca2+ from the internal store, resulting in contraction (17). Voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx also contributes to a number of other cellular events, including refilling of the SR, activation of plasmalemmal ion channels, and modulation of various enzyme activities, etc.

In vascular and gastrointestinal smooth muscle, on the other hand, voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx through L-type channels is sufficient for contraction (17). Moreover, many electrophysiological studies of these tissues reveal a "window current" spanning the physiologically relevant range of membrane potentials, i.e., a range of potentials more positive than the threshold for activation of the Ca2+ channels but over which voltage-dependent inactivation is not complete, giving rise to a persistent Ca2+ influx. Thus small hyperpolarizations lead to decreased activation of the channels and a drop in [Ca2+]i, while small depolarizations increase Ca2+ channel activation and elevate [Ca2+]i.

Despite the differences in the mechanisms underlying EC coupling in these tissues, the central role played by dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels in both cases provides the rationale for the use of Ca2+ channel blockers and K+ channel agonists in controlling cardiac and smooth muscle contractions in hypertension, stroke, myocardial infarction, and gastrointestinal motility disorders, etc. More importantly, clinical studies attest to the efficacy of these tools for these purposes (59, 66, 187).

Agonist-mediated EC coupling in ASM. Excitation of ASM is similar in many respects to that of vascular or gastrointestinal smooth muscles. First, it is accompanied by membrane depolarization (60) mediated primarily by activation of Cl- and nonselective cation currents as well as suppression of K+ currents (106, 117, 119, 120, 236). Patch-clamp studies have documented the large voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents activated by membrane depolarization (68, 140) (Fig. 1). Finally, these Ca2+ currents are sufficient to produce contraction, as manifest in the robust dihydropyridine-sensitive contractions evoked by potassium chloride (108, 122) or K+ channel blockers such as tetraethylammonium (TEA), 4-aminopyridine, or charybdotoxin (45), although these contractions are generally only a fraction of the size of those evoked by physiological agonists such as carbachol, histamine, and endothelin, etc.


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Fig. 1.   Acetylcholine-evoked depolarizations and Ca2+ currents. Current-voltage relationships in canine tracheal smooth muscle cells from 2 different laboratories [from Kotlikoff (140) () and Muraki et al. (164) ()] were converted to activation-voltage relationships by assuming that Ca2+ currents were maximally activated at +30 mV. Bars (left) indicate membrane potentials recorded in canine trachealis during stimulation with a range of concentrations of acetylcholine (Ach) [from Farley and Miles (60)]. Even with maximally effective concentrations of acetylcholine, membrane potential barely enters the range at which substantial Ca2+ current is activated. Similar results have been obtained for every mammalian species studied (see Fig. 4). VR, resting membrane potential; I/Imax, fraction of maximal current.

Given these similarities with other muscle types, it is understandable that many treat Ca2+, K+, and Cl- channels as central players in EC coupling in ASM. However, a large body of data speaks to the contrary.


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Do agonist-evoked contractions in ASM require voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx? Many groups have characterized the voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents in ASM (usually of the trachealis) and found these to be almost exclusively L-type in nature (77, 81, 84, 107, 140, 152, 164). It is particularly important to bear in mind a number of biophysical properties of these currents. 1) All electrophysiological studies find the threshold potential for these currents to be in excess of -40 mV, and almost all of them show little or no Ca2+ current until membrane voltages rise above -20 mV (Fig. 1); peak activation occurs at +10 to +20 mV. 2) These currents can develop substantial voltage- and Ca2+-dependent inactivation, and they are also suppressed by various second messenger signaling pathways (233, 242, 246). 3) L-type channels are selectively and potently blocked by dihydropyridines (Fig. 2), with an IC50 in the nanomolar range (158).


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Fig. 2.   Contractions in airway smooth muscle (ASM) are seemingly unaffected by blockers of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels or of Cl- channels. Despite the ability of niflumic acid and nifedipine to abolish Cl- and Ca2+ currents in ASM (A and B, respectively) [adapted from Janssen and Sims (117) and Janssen (107)], these agents have no substantial effect on agonist-evoked contractions (C).

Given these properties of the Ca2+ channels, several observations call into question the view that voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels play a central role in ASM contraction.

First, many have shown that agonist-evoked contraction of ASM is seemingly unaffected under conditions in which voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx is prevented by Ca2+ channel blockers (25, 26, 48, 61) (Fig. 2) by "clamping" the membrane potential to very negative values far below the threshold for Ca2+ channel activation (118) (Fig. 3) or even by removal of external Ca2+ (48, 61). Likewise, although Cl- channels are primarily responsible for the membrane depolarization (106, 117, 119, 120, 147, 148, 237, 238), agents such as niflumic acid, which are able to completely block the Cl- currents in ASM, have essentially no effect on resting membrane potential (113) or agonist-evoked contractions (Fig. 2). The only studies that do describe an inhibitory effect of dihydropyridines on mechanical responses in ASM were carried out under very nonphysiological conditions (complete depletion of the internal Ca2+ pool) (8, 24-26, 114, 123, 197, 224) or used supramaximally effective concentrations of dihydropyridines. For example, in the case of nifedipine, most groups tend to use 10-6 M, and may even use 10-5 M (231), even though the IC50 value reported for this agent is in the nanomolar range (158); submicromolar concentrations are sufficient to completely block the Ca2+ channels in ASM (77, 84, 243) and to suppress contractions in vascular or gastrointestinal smooth muscle (13, 38, 57, 70, 145). Thus nonspecific effects of the dihydropyridines (191) need to be kept in mind when interpreting such data.


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Fig. 3.   Substantial contraction can still be evoked at very negative membrane potentials. Vertical axis indicates cell length in an ASM cell held continuously under voltage clamp at -60 mV. Acetylcholine (10-4 M) was applied at ~3-min intervals (black-down-triangle ). Numerous contractions (to almost 50% of resting length) can still be evoked at this potential, which is far below threshold for opening of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. [From Janssen and Sims (118).]

Second, the range of membrane potentials typically seen in ASM at rest and during excitation ranges from -70 to -30 mV (1, 27, 40, 46, 60, 85, 95, 96, 99-102, 109, 111, 112, 125, 130, 132, 136, 155, 188, 215, 220), which is well below the range of potentials required for Ca2+ channel activation (-30 to +20 mV) (68, 81, 84, 107, 140, 152, 164, 242, 243, 247) (Figs. 1 and 4). More to the point, the voltages required to only marginally activate voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (-40 to -30 mV) are attained only with concentrations of agonist that evoke nearly complete contraction, and Ca2+ currents are maximal at membrane potentials never seen during agonist stimulation (+10 to +20 mV; see Figs. 1 and 4). Simultaneous electrophysiological and fura 2 fluorimetric recordings in equine ASM have shown that the Ca2+ currents evoked by voltage step commands to potentials in the physiologically relevant range produce elevations in [Ca2+]i of <50 nM (68), which pales in comparison with bronchoconstrictor-evoked Ca2+ responses (both the peak and plateau values typically measure several hundreds of nanomolars) (249-251).


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Fig. 4.   Membrane voltages and Ca2+ currents. Estimates of membrane potentials at rest () and during stimulation with various excitatory agents (), obtained using intracellular microelectrode techniques. Numerals in parentheses indicate reference citation from which data were extracted. Cch, carbachol; EFS, electric field stimulation; 4-AP, 4-aminopyridine; TEA, tetraethylammonium; 5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine. Also shown are voltages for threshold and peak (open circle  and , respectively) activation of voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents, as determined using patch-clamp electrophysiological techniques. The voltages at which those currents are half inactivated are also indicated by the solid vertical bar. Shaded box indicates the range of potentials at which membrane oscillations (slow waves) are typically seen in ASM. The purpose of this figure is to highlight the lack of overlap between the physiologically relevant range of potentials and those potentials required for significant voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx. TSM, tracheal smooth muscle; BSM, bronchial smooth muscle; LTC, leukotriene C4.

Third, the Ca2+ currents and changes in [Ca2+]i described above are overestimations of those one should expect to see in vivo. Because they were evoked under experimental conditions in which voltage-dependent inactivation had not developed to any substantial degree, i.e., the depolarizing steps used to evoke these currents are generally less than a few hundred milliseconds in duration and are each separated by several seconds to minimize inactivation. This inactivation is half-maximal (meaning the currents are halved in size) whenever membrane potential approaches -30 mV for more than a few seconds (77, 84, 107, 140, 164) and is nearly complete as membrane potential approaches 0 mV. Thus during slow wave activity, when the membrane potential is slowly oscillating between -40 and -20 mV for many minutes or even hours, substantial inactivation of these currents will have occurred. One group has described a small persistent Ca2+ influx at the lower limit of this voltage range (referred to as window current) that can manifest as a detectable elevation of [Ca2+]i (<100 nM) (67), but the latter is again too small to account for the robust contractions evoked by agonists.

Fourth, whenever the tissues are stimulated by bronchoconstrictors such as cholinergic agonists, voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents are further suppressed via phosphorylation of the channels by protein kinase C (246) and/or through Ca2+-induced inactivation of the Ca2+ channels (233). Thus the small window current that might exist would be wiped out by many bronchoconstrictors. Surprisingly, beta -agonists have been shown to augment L-type Ca2+ currents in ASM (242) even though they are powerful relaxants.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, clinical studies have found Ca2+ channel blockers to be ineffective as therapeutic agents in asthma (14, 65, 76, 86, 162, 189, 202).

This begs the question: Why does ASM exhibit such large Ca2+ and Cl- currents? We will propose several answers to this question in this review.

Do K+ channels play a major role in agonist-evoked relaxations? In general, K+ channels are divided into four major classes: Ca2+ dependent (KCa), voltage dependent (KV), ATP dependent (KATP), and inward rectifier (KIR) (142, 169, 187), of which there is substantial direct evidence in ASM for two of these classes and very limited evidence for the other two classes.

McCann and Welsh (157) were the first to directly record KCa in ASM, and there have since been innumerable studies that add to this evidence. These channels are generally of the large conductance subtype because they are highly sensitive to K+ channel blockers such as TEA, charybdotoxin, and iberiotoxin, with very little effect of the small conductance blocker apamin (28, 141, 165, 207, 208). Also, direct patch-clamp recordings show these channels to have unitary conductances of several hundred picoamperes (207, 208, 216). One of these studies (216) further found that these channels can undergo random conformational changes that lead to subconductance states of 17, 33, 41, 52, 63, and 72% of the full conductance. These currents can appear to be very "noisy" with chaotic oscillations and spikes, in part due to marked spatial/temporal changes in [Ca2+]i and the large unitary conductance of these channels.

KV currents in ASM have also been studied in detail at the whole cell (69, 141) and single channel (28) levels. Activation of these channels ensues after somewhat of a delay (28) (thus they are also referred to as "delayed rectifier" currents) and occurs much more "smoothly" than KCa given their smaller unitary conductance (10-15 pS) and insensitivity to [Ca2+]i relative to KCa. The channels also exhibit voltage-dependent inactivation, which is roughly half-maximal at the resting membrane potential. KV channels are effectively blocked by 4-aminopyridine (1-5 mM) or dendrotoxin (1-100 nM) but not by TEA, charybdotoxin, or glybenclamide unless unreasonably high concentrations of these agents are used (169).

Although there are many studies providing indirect evidence for KATP in ASM (in that relaxations are evoked by KATP agonists such as cromakalim) and these mechanical responses are antagonized by KATP blockers such as glybenclamide (21, 22, 36, 42, 43, 97, 131, 165, 178), direct electrophysiological evidence for these channels is essentially nonexistent. Many groups that have characterized K+ currents in ASM in detail directly using patch-clamp techniques have not reported a glybenclamide-sensitive component. Rather than an action on some channel per se, some evidence suggests that KATP agonists act instead by suppressing phosphodiesterase activity (178, 203).

Dozens of studies of ASM cells from the larger airways have failed to identify any inward rectifier K+ currents. However, one recent study (208) of cells obtained from small human bronchioles (outer diameter 0.3-1.0 mm) has done so. The physiological relevance of this possible regional heterogeneity is unclear.

General dogma has it that relaxants act by opening K+ channels and hyperpolarizing the membrane. However, again, several lines of evidence speak to the contrary.

For example, bronchodilators such as beta -agonists and nitric oxide can still evoke substantial or even complete relaxation in the presence of K+ channel blockers (6, 7, 45, 102, 116, 127, 128, 165, 219) (Fig. 5). Although a rightward shift in the concentration-response relationship for the bronchodilator is sometimes seen (127, 128, 163), this should be interpreted carefully. Such a parallel shift is a hallmark of competitive inhibition, yet the K+ channel blocker and bronchodilator agonist are not competing at a common receptor, and one should not expect that stimulating the receptor more aggressively (by using higher concentrations of agonist) would displace the blocker from the channel and thus unmask the relaxation. Instead, it may be that the K+ channel blockers are depolarizing nerve endings in the tissues, causing them to release excitatory agonists (97, 132) that then antagonize the bronchodilator response. Such functional antagonism can be overcome by using higher concentrations of bronchodilator agonist (64, 110, 185). Tetrodotoxin is not a guarantee against this because it only prevents depolarization caused by Na+ channel activation but not that caused by suppression of outward K+ currents in the nerve endings. Instead, agents such as omega -conotoxin should be used to prevent the subsequent Ca2+ influx and neurotransmitter release.


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Fig. 5.   Substantial relaxation can still be evoked during blockade of K+ channels. Relaxations were evoked by the NO donor soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein (SNAP) in ASM tissues pretreated with the K+ channel blockers charybdotoxin (ChTx; 0.1 µM), TEA (30 mM), or 4-AP (1 mM). These data suggest that K+ channels are not absolutely necessary for NO-evoked relaxation. [From Janssen et al. (116).]

Also, bronchodilators can often cause relaxations when voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx has already been abolished beforehand using Ca2+ channel blockers (22, 102, 130, 218). Others have found that relaxations are not evoked by artificially imposed hyperpolarizing current (39, 48); again, bronchoconstrictors can still evoke substantial contraction during voltage clamp at resting membrane potentials (117, 118) (Fig. 3).

Clearly, then, membrane hyperpolarization alone is neither necessary nor sufficient for relaxation in ASM. Consistent with this, K+ channel openers have been found to be ineffective as a therapy for asthma (41, 62, 135, 204). Thus a better understanding of agonist-evoked relaxation demands a new emphasis on mechanisms other than K+ channel activation. Many (perhaps all) bronchodilators that activate K+ channels are also known to exert other effects on ASM, including decreased Ca2+ sensitivity of the contractile apparatus (126, 174, 209, 210, 212), inhibition of D-myo-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) binding to its receptor on the SR (196), suppression of IP3-induced Ca2+ release (133, 241), and enhancement of Ca2+ uptake/extrusion (133).

EC coupling in ASM owes much more to voltage-independent mechanisms. In contrast to the questionable significance of membrane voltage-regulated Ca2+ influx, a number of voltage-independent mechanisms are primarily responsible for contraction in ASM.

The most widely recognized involves the release of Ca2+ sequestered within the SR. Cholinergic agonists, histamine, endothelin, leukotrienes, and thromboxane A2 activate phospholipase C, which, in turn, generates the second messengers diacylglycerol and IP3 (32-34). The latter of these two messengers activates Ca2+-permeable ion channels on the membrane of the SR, releasing its store of Ca2+ and, thereby, triggering contraction (212). The SR also expresses another group of Ca2+-permeable ion channels that are activated by Ca2+ itself, caffeine, ryanodine, or by cyclic ADP ribose (71, 201, 209, 212). The physiological role of these "ryanodine receptors" is still debated (see Bronchodilators: is K+ channel activation a causal event or an epiphenomenon?). Refilling of the SR involves primarily the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA). However, the existence of at least one other novel refilling pathway has been suggested (25, 26, 118, 186) as summarized in Voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and SR refilling.

More recently, a great deal of attention has been focused on agonist-induced changes in the sensitivity of the contractile apparatus to [Ca2+]. One such mechanism that is gaining a great deal of momentum both in the vascular and ASM fields involves activation of the monomeric G protein Rho, which in turn translocates to the membrane and activates Rho kinase (31, 98, 124, 253). The latter phosphorylates and thereby inactivates MLCP, leading to a net accumulation of phosphorylated myosin light chains, and thus contraction (211). Others are investigating mechanisms such as extracellular regulated kinase (ERK)-mediated phosphorylation of caldesmon and calponin (72, 75), integrin-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase, paxillin, and talin (73, 159, 160, 177, 221, 223, 240), and protein kinase C activation (2, 29, 93). Endothelin-stimulated activation of ERK was recently shown to be dependent on Ca2+ influx (232), indicating some "cross talk" between Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent pathways.

The superficial buffer barrier and spatial/temporal heterogeneity of [Ca2+] in ASM. Several recent findings have revolutionized the way Ca2+ handling in ASM should be considered.

First, until recently, the internal Ca2+ pool has usually been modeled as being more or less centrally located and releasing its store of Ca2+ roughly uniformly throughout the entire cytosol. However, we had long been puzzled by the observation that both acetylcholine and caffeine evoke substantial elevations of [Ca2+]i as well as membrane currents, but only the former would reliably evoke contraction (74, 108, 117, 119). That is, caffeine only evokes a contraction when it causes a massive discharge of Ca2+ (e.g., when applied instantaneously in high millimolar concentrations), but not when this discharge occurs gradually (e.g., using lower concentrations and/or introducing caffeine more slowly via the bath perfusion). Electronmicroscopy of vascular smooth muscle cells shows the SR to form sheets around the internal periphery of the cell (170), thereby dividing the cytosol into two spaces (Fig. 6), the peripheral space immediately underneath the plasmalemma where ion channels are found (many of them being regulated by Ca2+), and the deep cytosolic space where the contractile apparatus is found. Another recent study suggests that the same anatomical arrangement can be found in ASM (49). In this way, the cell can dissociate the influence of [Ca2+] on mechanical and electrical activities. This "superficial buffer barrier" accounts for the paradoxical effects of caffeine (108, 124): ryanodine receptors may direct Ca2+ release preferentially into the peripheral space (and, thereby, activate ion channels), and the contractile apparatus only becomes activated when this release is so massive that it "spills over" into the deep space. It can also explain how subnanomolar concentrations of acetylcholine can evoke substantial ionic current but without any change in tension (124). That is, the ionic currents indicate that Ca2+ is in fact being released (because they are totally dependent on that process) (108, 117, 118, 121, 143, 238) although this release cannot be discerned using fluorimetric techniques that measure the average change in [Ca2+]i throughout the entire cell (124, 198, 200, 249). However, the anticipated mechanical response is quelled by the barrier function of the SR. Thus it is essential to use more refined Ca2+ imaging techniques, ones that can resolve subcellular regions, for further studies of Ca2+ handling in ASM.


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Fig. 6.   Superficial buffer barrier model. The sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) divides the cytosol into 2 spatially and functionally distinct compartments: the subplasmalemmal space and the deep cytosolic space. Bottom left: excitatory agonists release Ca2+ into the deep cytosol to trigger contraction, as well as into the subplasmalemmal space to activate Ca2+-dependent Cl- channels. Bottom right: relaxants, on the other hand, promote Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+ extrusion but also trigger Ca2+ release via ryanodine receptors. The latter effect allows for unloading of the SR, increasing its buffering capacity, without triggering contraction. It may also lead to activation of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels and membrane hyperpolarization.

Another change in our understanding of Ca2+ handling was stimulated by advances made in other cell types using highly sophisticated Ca2+ imaging equipment. In the ASM field, many focus their attention on the magnitude of the solitary, brief, spikelike Ca2+ transient evoked by a high concentration of agonist and relate that to much more persistent cellular events, such as contraction. In other words, this Ca2+ transient is being interpreted as a persistent elevation of [Ca2+]i throughout the entire cell. Instead, the sustained changes in [Ca2+]i evoked by lower concentrations of agonist might be more physiologically relevant. It is now known that agonists can evoke recurring changes in [Ca2+]i ("oscillations"), which propagate throughout the cell ("waves") (225), and are further refined or shaped as they progress through the cytosol (139). These oscillations convey information within their amplitudes (peak height as well as their mean or temporally averaged amplitude) as well as in their frequency, and this information may be decoded by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase (19, 20, 30, 35, 50, 52, 55, 184), MLCK (50), the SR Ca2+ pump (50), calpain (229), adenylyl cyclase (44), or mitochondria (79). For example, gene expression of several proinflammatory cytokines is differentially regulated by Ca2+ oscillations in a frequency- and amplitude-dependent fashion (54, 146). Ca2+ oscillations have been reported in ASM from the human (56), rat (193, 194, 227), guinea pig (117, 200), pig (171, 180-183), and dog (117), but their underlying mechanism and their physiological relevance are still poorly understood.

Finally, a great deal of work has been done in the cardiac and vascular smooth muscle fields looking at Ca2+ sparks: small and transient elevations of [Ca2+]i produced by localized bursts of Ca2+ from a handful of ryanodine receptors (23, 82, 103, 104, 168). These are proposed to be the triggers for spontaneous transient ion currents, which, in turn, are believed to modulate mechanical activity (168, 254). They also represent the fundamental event underlying Ca2+ oscillations and relaxations in vascular smooth muscle (168). There have been limited studies of sparks in ASM (172, 173, 199, 254), but their physiological role(s) is unclear. Although they may lead to activation of K+ and Cl- channels (254), electromechanical coupling is of limited importance in ASM. Instead, their primary function may be to discharge the SR contents, without evoking contraction, toward the plasmalemmal Ca2+ pump to increase the buffering capacity of the SR.

Thus Ca2+ signals are organized into complex temporal and spatial patterns that are lost using techniques and models that focus solely on the spikelike elevation averaged across the entire ASM cell. Many previous reports of Ca2+ responses in ASM were severely limited, because whole cell photometry was used: this approach averages the changes in [Ca2+]i across the entire cell. None have yet compared bronchoconstrictor-induced changes in the deep cytosol vs. the subplasmalemmal space. Also, the sampling rate of most of these studies (on the order of 1 Hz) was much too slow to adequately resolve events with time courses on the millisecond scale, such as Ca2+ oscillations and Ca2+ sparks (199). Finally, the few studies able to resolve subcellular regions generally used only a maximally effective concentration of excitatory agonist: we have previously obtained evidence (using patch-clamp recordings) that concentrations of acetylcholine that were subthreshold for mechanical or fluorimetric responses nonetheless evoked substantial membrane currents (124), suggesting important differences between global and subplasmalemmal measurements of [Ca2+]. The concentration of agonist used is also important with respect to the likelihood of observing Ca2+ oscillations, since models of these phenomena indicate a critical dependence on variables such as [IP3] and basal [Ca2+] (199, 225).


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Voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and SR refilling. Several studies show voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in ASM to be important for refilling and maintenance of the SR (25, 26, 118, 149, 186). For example, we used agonist-evoked Cl- currents to assess the filling state of the SR, and we found that we could completely deplete the SR using cyclopiazonic acid (SERCA inhibitor) and then refill the SR in a dihydropyridine-sensitive fashion using a series of depolarizing pulses (Fig. 7) (118). More surprisingly, though, this refilling occurred in the maintained presence of cyclopiazonic acid (which was completely sufficient to functionally deplete the SR), suggesting that this refilling pathway did not involve SERCA. In other words, Ca2+ was crossing the plasmalemma and entering the SR without being pumped by the Ca2+-ATPase.


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Fig. 7.   Ca2+ currents may contribute to refilling of the SR. Acetylcholine-evoked Cl- currents (black-down-triangle ) were used to assess the filling state of the SR in canine tracheal smooth muscle. Exposure to cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) completely depleted the SR (ii). In the maintained presence of cyclopiazonic acid, a series of depolarizing pulses led to partial refilling of the SR (iii). This refilling was enhanced by the Ca2+ channel agonist BayK8644 and inhibited by nifedipine (iv). [From Janssen and Sims (118).]

These paradoxical findings can be explained using a recently proposed model that describes a physical interaction between the SR and plasmalemmal store-operated Ca2+ channels (18, 138, 176, 190, 191, 252). Briefly, agonist-induced depletion of the internal store triggers activation of tyrosine kinase(s), Ras, and reorganization of the cytoskeleton in such a way that it directly couples IP3 receptors on the SR with Ca2+ channels on the plasmalemma. Similarly, a functional interaction between voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and the nucleus has recently been described. Dolmetsch et al. (53) found that gene transcription could be stimulated by Ca2+ influx through L-type Ca2+ channels but not through N- or P/Q-type Ca2+ channels (which are also present but seem to contribute to other physiological responses in these cells). Their data show that calmodulin, which is tethered at the mouth of the L-type Ca2+ channels and is activated by Ca2+ influx through them, signals to the nucleus via a mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway (53).

Several observations made in ASM are consistent with a physical coupling between plasmalemmal Ca2+ channels and SR membranes. First, excitatory stimulation of ASM is accompanied by activation of tyrosine kinases (206, 228) and Ras/Rho (58, 80, 83, 226) as well as cytoskeletal rearrangement (78, 83, 226). Second, inhibition of tyrosine kinases compromises SR refilling (151). Third, ASM depleted of focal adhesion kinase (which regulates cytoskeleton stability) shows marked suppression of acetylcholine-evoked Ca2+ transients and contractions as well as changes in voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel function without any disruptive changes in the contractile apparatus per se (assessed by addition of Ca2+ to permeabilized strips) (222). Fourth, our observation that the SR can be refilled by voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx in the maintained presence of cyclopiazonic acid is difficult to explain otherwise, because there is no other Ca2+ pump on the SR other than SERCA.

At first glance, this novel model of SR refilling also suffers from the criticism raised earlier in this review that membrane potential rarely reaches the threshold for opening of the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. However, if there is a very close apposition or even physical coupling between the plasmalemmal and SR membranes, it is unclear what transmembrane potentials the plasmalemmal Ca2+ channels would experience. That is, the close proximity and physical interaction of a large polypeptide (the IP3 receptor) and the SR membrane with the inner face of the Ca2+ channel, with the resultant changes in membrane surface charge and/or induction of conformational changes in the Ca2+ channel, could easily alter their voltage characteristics, allowing them to open at physiologically relevant potentials (167). Also, access of Ca2+ and of protein kinase C to the inner face of the Ca2+ channels might be hindered during this interaction, thereby preventing Ca2+ channel inactivation.

Bronchodilators: is K+ channel activation a causal event or an epiphenomenon? The traditional view has been that bronchodilators act by decreasing [Ca2+]i throughout the cell. Surprisingly, however, we and others have described elevations in [Ca2+]i in response to relaxant agents (63, 115, 116, 245). Yamaguchi et al. (245) resolved the effects of isoproterenol on [Ca2+] in greater detail and showed that it increases [Ca2+] in the peripheral regions of the ASM cells and decreases it in their more central regions. One interpretation of these findings is that bronchodilators act by triggering Ca2+ release from the SR, completely contrary to current dogma, but not in the same fashion as bronchoconstrictors. That is, rather than elevating [Ca2+]i globally throughout the cell (via IP3-induced Ca2+ release), the data suggest that ryanodine receptors are involved and direct Ca2+ into the subplasmalemmal space where it is extruded from the cell by the plasmalemmal Ca2+-ATPase. In the process, Ca2+-dependent K+ channels may or may not be activated. Although extensive evidence has been given for such a mechanism in vascular smooth muscle (103, 105, 137, 168), this model has not been examined in ASM. However, there has been one report of K+ currents activated by Ca2+ sparks in ASM (although relaxants were not used in this study) (254), and the isoproterenol-induced elevation of [Ca2+]i was shown to involve ryanodine receptors (245). Isoproterenol (171), cAMP (171), and cGMP (37) suppress the frequency of cholinergic Ca2+ oscillations in ASM.

It appears, then, that bronchodilators simultaneously trigger uptake of Ca2+ from the deep cytosol into the SR as well as release of SR Ca2+ into the subplasmalemmal space, followed by extrusion of Ca2+ from that peripheral space into the extracellular space (Fig. 6). Our proposal that relaxants stimulate Ca2+ release might be counterintuitive, but it should be expected. The cells must be able to discharge internally sequestered Ca2+, but without triggering contraction, to increase/maintain the Ca2+-buffering capacity of the SR. Data presented in an earlier study (108) suggest that ryanodine receptors are involved and that this Ca2+ release is preferentially directed into the subplasmalemmal space. The important point to be made in all of this is that K+ channels appear to be more like bystanders than key players in the process of relaxation.

What role do plasmalemmal Cl- channels play in ASM physiology? There is substantial electrophysiological evidence for a population of Cl- channels activated during excitatory stimulation (81, 106, 117, 119, 120, 147, 148, 237, 238). These channels exhibit a small unitary conductance (far below 20 pS) (121), and their activation is Ca2+ dependent (via Gq/G11-stimulated release of internal Ca2+) (238) but voltage independent (121). Moreover, these inactivate in a voltage-sensitive fashion (121) via phosphorylation by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (237) (which is in turn triggered by the elevation of [Ca2+]i that activated the channels in the first place).

Given that excitatory stimulation is generally associated with such large Cl- currents that can depolarize the membrane and are tightly regulated by second messenger signaling events (121, 237, 241, 254), much as is the case in vascular smooth muscle, it is easy to conclude that the Cl- currents play a key role in contraction of ASM by depolarizing the membrane and thus triggering voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx. However, the truth of the matter is that agonist-evoked contractions are not affected by Cl- channel blockers (Fig. 2). Also, given that the equilibrium potential for Cl- is approximately -40 to -30 mV (4, 5), activation of Cl- channels will indeed depolarize the membrane but will essentially clamp it at potentials barely sufficient for activation of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. Again, it bears repeating that substantial contractions can still be evoked during voltage clamp at very negative potentials (118) (Fig. 3), indicating that depolarization is not necessary for contraction anyway. Why, then, are Cl- currents so prominent in ASM?

Recently, another type of Cl- channel has been isolated from ASM with properties diametrically opposite to those described above (195). That is, they have a large unitary conductance (several hundred picosiemens) and their activation is voltage dependent but Ca2+ independent. All of these properties are similar to those of the Cl- channels present on the SR of skeletal and cardiac muscle and facilitate Ca2+ flux by neutralizing charge buildup on the SR membranes (3).

This finding prompts us to propose an entirely novel and testable hypothesis: that agonists activate Cl- currents in the plasmalemma of the ASM cell to facilitate Ca2+ release/uptake. That is, Ca2+ efflux from the SR leads to a net negative charge on the inner face of the SR membrane that hinders Ca2+ release (Fig. 8A) unless alleviated by compensatory fluxes of Cl- out of the SR (Fig. 8B) (134, 179). However, the accumulation of Cl- outside the SR opposes further Cl- efflux from the SR (and thus Ca2+ release; Fig. 8B). A sudden opening of Cl- channels on the plasmalemma, with subsequent loss of Cl- from the subplasmalemmal space, would instantaneously alter the equilibrium potential for Cl- across the SR membrane, thereby boosting efflux of Cl- (and Ca2+) from the SR (Fig. 8C). Consistent with this, we have noted anecdotally that agonist-evoked membrane currents and contractions were lost in cells studied using a low internal [Cl-] solution (20 mM) (117).


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Fig. 8.   Hypothesized role for membrane Cl- channels. A: release of Ca2+ from the SR results in accumulation of negative charge (-) on the membrane of the SR, which in turn hinders further Ca2+ release. B: efflux of Cl- from the SR compensates for the charge buildup and allows greater Ca2+ release. However, accumulation of Cl- in the cytosol hinders both processes. C: opening of Cl- channels on the plasmalemma allows a massive Cl- efflux from the cell, instantaneously increasing the driving force on Cl- to exit the SR, thereby allowing complete dissipation of the charge buildup and thus facilitating further Ca2+ release.

Voltage-independent Ca2+ influx pathways? Agonists activate a membrane conductance that is nonselective for various monovalent cations (117, 235, 239). It is unclear whether this conductance is Ca2+ permeable and, thereby, serves as a source of Ca2+ for contraction as is the case in vascular and gastrointestinal smooth muscle (51, 90, 94). Elevation of [Ca2+]i is necessary but not sufficient for activation of these nonselective cation channels; instead, they are activated by Gi/Go (activated by M2 muscarinic or H1 histaminergic receptors). While the Cl- current that is concurrently activated by these agonists decays within seconds, the nonselective cation channels remain open as long as the agonists are present, resulting in a persistent noninactivating inward current.


    IONIC MECHANISMS IN ASM PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
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Inflammation plays a central role in asthma and airway hyperreactivity, and it is becoming increasingly clear that cytokines and inflammatory mediators exert a variety of effects on various aspects of ASM function. Several researchers have sought to examine whether ionic mechanisms are altered in asthma or in animal models of airway hyperresponsiveness. For example, it might be possible that membrane potentials are higher or Ca2+ currents greater in tissues/cells from asthmatics or hyperresponsive animals, as can happen for vascular smooth muscle cells and hypertension (150, 217). However, immunological stimulation of excised guinea pig tracheal tissues causes first a small and transient membrane depolarization, followed by a marked and prolonged membrane hyperpolarization (213, 215). In excised tissues exposed to allergen in vivo, membrane potentials were slightly more hyperpolarized (<5 mV) when the guinea pigs had been acutely sensitized to allergen but markedly depolarized (by >10 mV) when the animals had been chronically exposed to allergen (156, 214). While canine ASM is normally very polarized (resting potentials of approximately -60 mV) and does not show spontaneous phasic electrical activity, ASM from dogs with "aspirin-induced asthma" exhibited marked membrane depolarization and slow wave activity (101). This might be related to the suppression of delayed rectifier K+ current (more specifically, enhanced inactivation of the channels), which is reported to occur in allergen-sensitized canine bronchial smooth muscle (234). Despite all these observed changes in electrophysiological activity in vitro, their significance to airway physiology/pathophysiology is unclear given that electromechanical coupling is relatively unimportant in ASM and that Ca2+ channel blockers and K+ channel openers are generally ineffective in the treatment of asthma in the clinical setting (14, 41, 62, 65, 76, 86, 135, 162, 189, 202, 204).

On the other hand, asthma and airway hyperresponsiveness might be associated with changes in Ca2+ handling. Perhaps basal levels of [Ca2+]i are higher or Ca2+ release is greater. Several proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1beta , tumor necrosis factor-alpha , interferon-gamma , platelet-derived growth factor, and eosinophil major basic protein markedly augment excitatory agonist-evoked Ca2+ transients (9, 10, 12, 244, 248), phosphoinositide turnover (10, 248), and contractions (11, 154, 175, 244). In some cases, these effects involve mitogen-activated protein kinase cascades (ras, raf, MEK, Rho, Rho kinase) and induction of gene expression, protein synthesis, and proliferation (10, 88, 89, 226).

Oxidizing pollutants such as ozone and acrolein induce airway hyperreactivity. Although these act in part through inflammatory cells, they can also alter EC coupling and other cellular events in isolated ASM cells or tissues (15, 16, 91, 92, 153, 192). This direct action on the ASM per se seems to involve changes in inositol phosphate metabolism and Ca2+ handling, with induction or augmentation of Ca2+ oscillations (91, 92, 192, 194).


    FUTURE DIRECTIONS
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
TRADITIONAL VIEWS
CHALLENGING THE DOGMA
NOVEL IONIC MECHANISMS
IONIC MECHANISMS IN ASM...
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
REFERENCES

On the basis of the arguments laid out in this review, we propose the following recommendations in future studies of ASM physiology.

Ionic mechanisms. It seems that too many groups are studying ionic mechanisms in ASM in the same fashion as they would a vascular or gastrointestinal smooth muscle preparation. There has been far too much emphasis on voltage-dependent mechanisms, to an extent that is not warranted by clinical studies of Ca2+ channel blockers or K+ channel agonists. As outlined above, ASM is distinct from skeletal, cardiac, and vascular smooth muscle in many respects pertaining to EC coupling, and a great deal remains to be learned about its unique physiology and pathophysiology. There needs to be greater consideration of other roles for the ion channels that do not depend on, or relate to, electromechanical coupling.

Ca2+ handling. The hypothesis that Ca2+ may play an important causal role in airway hyperreactivity and asthma was proposed more than two decades ago (161, 230) but still has not been explored in sufficient detail. We believe this has resulted in an overly simplistic model of Ca2+ handling in ASM and an imbalanced understanding of electromechanical coupling mechanisms, as outlined above. A breakdown in the superficial buffer barrier and/or changes in Ca2+ sparks/Ca2+ oscillations may be more relevant to airway hyperreactivity than increases in basal [Ca2+]i or peak magnitudes of agonist-evoked Ca2+ transients.

EC coupling. A great deal more attention needs to be focused on recently discovered EC coupling mechanisms in ASM, particularly Rho/Rho-activated kinase-mediated regulation of MLCP as well as pathways directed at thin filaments. Moreover, most studies use only a maximally effective concentration of agonist in their studies. The full range of agonist concentrations should be examined, from subthreshold to maximally effective concentrations, since there is now evidence that different EC coupling mechanisms may contribute to differing degrees depending on the level of excitation (124, 194). Also, experimental strategies and tools need to be wielded with a greater degree of sophistication. For example, we should be increasingly wary of the use of micromolar concentrations of dihydropyridine blockers, or of contractions as an index of [Ca2+]i, or of focusing almost exclusively on the temporally and spatially averaged spikelike elevations of [Ca2+] evoked by a maximally effective concentration of agonist. Finally, the vast majority of studies of airway function are done using tracheal tissues/cells. A greater use of smaller airways is advocated because evidence is accumulating for marked regional differences across the airway tree (47, 124, 208).

In summary, a more imaginative approach to the study of EC coupling in ASM, one that does not lean so heavily on electromechanical mechanisms, could lead to major advances in our understanding of the unique physiology (and pathophysiology) of ASM.


    FOOTNOTES

Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. J. Janssen, L-314, St. Joseph's Hospital, 40 Charlton Ave. E., Hamilton, ON, Canada L8N 4A6 (E-mail: janssenl{at}mcmaster.ca).

10.1152/ajplung.00452.2001


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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
TRADITIONAL VIEWS
CHALLENGING THE DOGMA
NOVEL IONIC MECHANISMS
IONIC MECHANISMS IN ASM...
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
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