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Dive into the research topics where Gary S. Bird is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary S. Bird.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Large store-operated calcium selective currents due to co-expression of Orai1 or Orai2 with the intracellular calcium sensor, Stim1.

Jason C. Mercer; Wayne I. DeHaven; Jeremy T. Smyth; Barbara J. Wedel; Rebecca R. Boyles; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

The molecular nature of store-operated Ca2+-selective channels has remained an enigma, due largely to the continued inability to convincingly demonstrate Ca2+-selective store-operated currents resulting from exogenous expression of known genes. Recent findings have implicated two proteins, Stim1 and Orai1, as having essential roles in store-operated Ca2+ entry across the plasma membrane. However, transient overexpression of these proteins on their own results in little or no increase in store-operated entry. Here we demonstrate dramatic synergism between these two mediators; co-transfection of HEK293 cells with Stim1 and Orai1 results in an approximate 20-fold increase in store-operated Ca2+ entry and Ca2+-selective current. This demonstrates that these two proteins are limiting for both the signaling and permeation mechanisms for Ca2+-selective store-operated Ca2+ entry. There are three mammalian homologs of Orai1, and in expression experiments they all produced or augmented store-operated Ca2+ entry with efficacies in the order Orai1 > Orai2 > Orai3. Stim1 apparently initiates the signaling process by acting as a Ca2+ sensor in the endoplasmic reticulum. This results in rearrangement of Stim1 within the cell and migration toward the plasma membrane to regulate in some manner Orai1 located in the plasma membrane. However, we demonstrate that Stim1 does not incorporate in the surface membrane, and thus likely regulates or interacts with Orai1 at sites of close apposition between the plasma membrane and an intracellular Stim1-containing organelle.


The Journal of Physiology | 2009

TRPC channels function independently of STIM1 and Orai1.

Wayne I. DeHaven; Bertina F. Jones; John G. Petranka; Jeremy T. Smyth; Takuro Tomita; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

Recent studies have defined roles for STIM1 and Orai1 as calcium sensor and calcium channel, respectively, for Ca2+‐release activated Ca2+ (CRAC) channels, channels underlying store‐operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE). In addition, these proteins have been suggested to function in signalling and constructing other channels with biophysical properties distinct from the CRAC channels. Using the human kidney cell line, HEK293, we examined the hypothesis that STIM1 can interact with and regulate members of a family of non‐selective cation channels (TRPC) which have been suggested to also function in SOCE pathways under certain conditions. Our data reveal no role for either STIM1 or Orai1 in signalling of TRPC channels. Specifically, Ca2+ entry seen after carbachol treatment in cells transiently expressing TRPC1, TRPC3, TRPC5 or TRPC6 was not enhanced by the co‐expression of STIM1. Further, knockdown of STIM1 in cells expressing TRPC5 did not reduce TRPC5 activity, in contrast to one published report. We previously reported in stable TRPC7 cells a Ca2+ entry which was dependent on TRPC7 and appeared store‐operated. However, we show here that this TRPC7‐mediated entry was also not dependent on either STIM1 or Orai1, as determined by RNA interference (RNAi) and expression of a constitutively active mutant of STIM1. Further, we determined that this entry was not actually store‐operated, but instead TRPC7 activity which appears to be regulated by SERCA. Importantly, endogenous TRPC activity was also not regulated by STIM1. In vascular smooth muscle cells, arginine‐vasopressin (AVP) activated non‐selective cation currents associated with TRPC6 activity were not affected by RNAi knockdown of STIM1, while SOCE was largely inhibited. Finally, disruption of lipid rafts significantly attenuated TRPC3 activity, while having no effect on STIM1 localization or the development of ICRAC. Also, STIM1 punctae were found to localize in regions distinct from lipid rafts. This suggests that TRPC signalling and STIM1/Orai1 signalling occur in distinct plasma membrane domains. Thus, TRPC channels appear to be activated by mechanisms dependent on phospholipase C which do not involve the Ca2+ sensor, STIM1.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Complex Actions of 2-Aminoethyldiphenyl Borate on Store-operated Calcium Entry

Wayne I. DeHaven; Jeremy T. Smyth; Rebecca R. Boyles; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

Store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) is likely the most common mode of regulated influx of Ca2+ into cells. However, only a limited number of pharmacological agents have been shown to modulate this process. 2-Aminoethyldiphenyl borate (2-APB) is a widely used experimental tool that activates and then inhibits SOCE and the underlying calcium release-activated Ca2+ current (ICRAC). The mechanism by which depleted stores activates SOCE involves complex cellular movements of an endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sensor, STIM1, which redistributes to puncta near the plasma membrane and, in some manner, activates plasma membrane channels comprising Orai1, -2, and -3 subunits. We show here that 2-APB blocks puncta formation of fluorescently tagged STIM1 in HEK293 cells. Accordingly, 2-APB also inhibited SOCE and ICRAC-like currents in cells co-expressing STIM1 with the CRAC channel subunit, Orai1, with similar potency. However, 2-APB inhibited STIM1 puncta formation less well in cells co-expressing Orai1, indicating that the inhibitory effects of 2-APB are not solely dependent upon STIM1 reversal. Further, 2-APB only partially inhibited SOCE and current in cells co-expressing STIM1 and Orai2 and activated sustained currents in HEK293 cells expressing Orai3 and STIM1. Interestingly, the Orai3-dependent currents activated by 2-APB showed large outward currents at potentials greater than +50 mV. Finally, Orai3, and to a lesser extent Orai1, could be directly activated by 2-APB, independently of internal Ca2+ stores and STIM1. These data reveal novel and complex actions of 2-APB effects on SOCE that can be attributed to effects on both STIM1 as well as Orai channel subunits.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Human Trp3 forms both inositol trisphosphate receptor-dependent and receptor-independent store-operated cation channels in DT40 avian B lymphocytes

Guillermo Vazquez; Jean-Philippe Lievremont; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

Mammalian Trp proteins are candidates for plasma membrane calcium channels regulated by receptor activation or by intracellular calcium store depletion [capacitative calcium entry (CCE)]. One extensively investigated member of the Trp family, the human Trp3 (hTrp3), behaves as a receptor-activated, calcium-permeable, nonselective cation channel when expressed in cell lines and does not appear to be activated by store depletion. Nonetheless, there is good evidence that Trp3 can be regulated by interacting with inositol trisphosphate receptors (IP3Rs), reminiscent of the conformational coupling mode of CCE. To investigate the role of Trp3 in CCE, and its regulation by IP3R, we transiently expressed hTrp3 in the wild-type DT40 chicken B lymphocyte cell line and its variant lacking IP3R. Expression of hTrp3 in either wild-type or IP3R-knockout cells did not increase basal membrane permeability, but resulted in a substantially greater divalent cation entry after thapsigargin-induced store depletion. This hTrp3-dependent divalent cation entry was significantly greater in the wild type than in IP3R-knockout cells. Thus, it appears that in this cell line, hTrp3 forms channels that are store-operated by both IP3R-dependent and IP3R-independent mechanisms. Trp3, or one of its structural relatives, is a candidate for the store-operated, nonselective cation channels observed in smooth muscle cells and other cell types.


Methods | 2008

Methods for studying store-operated calcium entry

Gary S. Bird; Wayne I. DeHaven; Jeremy T. Smyth; James W. Putney

Activation of surface membrane receptors coupled to phospholipase C results in the generation of cytoplasmic Ca2+ signals comprised of both intracellular Ca2+ release, and enhanced entry of Ca2+ across the plasma membrane. A primary mechanism for this Ca2+ entry process is attributed to store-operated Ca2+ entry, a process that is activated by depletion of Ca2+ ions from an intracellular store by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying both Ca2+ release and store-operated Ca2+ entry have evolved from experimental approaches that include the use of fluorescent Ca2+ indicators and electrophysiological techniques. Pharmacological manipulation of this Ca2+ signaling process has been somewhat limited; but recent identification of key molecular players, STIM and Orai family proteins, has provided new approaches. Here we describe practical methods involving fluorescent Ca2+ indicators and electrophysiological approaches for dissecting the observed intracellular Ca2+ signal to reveal characteristics of store-operated Ca2+ entry, highlighting the advantages, and limitations, of these approaches.


Journal of Cell Science | 2008

Ca2+-store-dependent and -independent reversal of Stim1 localization and function

Jeremy T. Smyth; Wayne I. DeHaven; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

Stim1 responds to depletion of ER Ca2+ stores by rearranging from tubular structures throughout the ER into punctate structures near the plasma membrane, where it activates Orai store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) channels. However, the mechanism and structural determinants of the localization and reversal of Stim1 puncta formation are poorly understood. Using HEK293 cells expressing Stim1 tagged with enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP-Stim1), we show that the basis for SOCE termination is the reversal of the punctate Stim1 localization, which absolutely depends on SOCE-dependent store refilling. We also describe rapid, store-independent reversal of EYFP-Stim1 punctae by the ML-9 inhibitor of myosin-light-chain kinase (MLCK). ML-9 similarly inhibited SOCE and the Ca2+-release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) current. Reversal by ML-9 resulted in full re-establishment of the tubular EYFP-Stim1 localization. A constitutively active EF-hand mutant of EYFP-Stim1 was also reversed by ML-9, regardless of the Ca2+ store content. Inhibition by ML-9 was not due to MLCK inhibition as other inhibitors of MLCK had no effect. Finally, we provide evidence that EYFP-Stim1 punctae form in specific predetermined cellular loci. We conclude that SOCE is tightly coupled to formation of Stim1 puncta, and both SOCE and puncta formation involve a dynamic, reversible signaling complex that probably consists of components in addition to Stim1 and Orai channels.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Cloning and expression of the human transient receptor potential 4 (TRP4) gene: localization and functional expression of human TRP4 and TRP3.

Richard R. McKay; Caroline L. Szymeczek-Seay; Jean-Philippe Lievremont; Gary S. Bird; Christof Zitt; Eberhard Jüngling; Andreas Lückhoff; James W. Putney

Mammalian homologues of the Drosophila transient receptor potential (TRP) protein have been proposed to function as ion channels, and in some cases as store-operated or capacitative calcium entry channels. However, for each of the mammalian TRP proteins, different laboratories have reported distinct modes of cellular regulation. In the present study we describe the cloning and functional expression of the human form of TRP4 (hTRP4), and compare its activity with another well studied protein, hTRP3. When hTRP4 was transiently expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells, basal bivalent cation permeability (barium) was increased. Whole-cell patch-clamp studies of hTRP4 expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells revealed a constitutively active non-selective cation current which probably underlies the increased bivalent cation entry. Barium entry into hTRP4-transfected HEK-293 cells was not further increased by phospholipase C (PLC)-linked receptor activation, by intracellular calcium store depletion with thapsigargin, or by a synthetic diacylglycerol, 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG). In contrast, transient expression of hTRP3 resulted in a bivalent cation influx that was markedly increased by PLC-linked receptor activation and by OAG, but not by thapsigargin. Despite the apparent differences in regulation of these two putative channel proteins, green fluorescent protein fusions of both molecules localized similarly to the plasma-membrane, notably in discrete punctate regions suggestive of specialized signalling complexes. Our findings indicate that while both hTRP4 and hTRP3 can apparently function as cation channels, their putative roles as components of capacitative calcium entry channels are not readily demonstrable by examining their behaviour when exogenously expressed in cells.


The Journal of Physiology | 2005

Capacitative calcium entry supports calcium oscillations in human embryonic kidney cells

Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

Treatment of human epithelial kidney (HEK293) cells with low concentrations of the muscarinic agonist methacholine results in the activation of complex and repetitive cycling of intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i), known as [Ca2+]i oscillations. These oscillations occur with a frequency that depends on the concentration of methacholine, whereas the magnitude of the [Ca2+]i spikes does not. The oscillations do not persist in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, leading to the conclusion that entry of Ca2+ across the plasma membrane plays a significant role in either their initiation or maintenance. However, treatment of cells with high concentrations of GdCl3, a condition which limits the flux of calcium ions across the plasma membrane in both directions, allows sustained [Ca2+]i oscillations to occur. This suggests that the mechanisms that both initiate and regenerate [Ca2+]i oscillations are intrinsic to the intracellular milieu and do not require entry of extracellular Ca2+. This would additionally suggest that, under normal conditions, the role of calcium entry is to sustain [Ca2+]i oscillations. By utilizing relatively specific pharmacological manoeuvres we provide evidence that the Ca2+ entry that supports Ca2+ oscillations occurs through the store‐operated or capacitative calcium entry pathway. However, by artificial introduction of a non‐store‐operated pathway into the cells (TRPC3 channels), we find that other Ca2+ entry mechanisms can influence oscillation frequency in addition to the store‐operated channels.


Current Biology | 2009

STIM1 Is a Calcium Sensor Specialized for Digital Signaling

Gary S. Bird; Sung-Yong Hwang; Jeremy T. Smyth; Miwako Fukushima; Rebecca R. Boyles; James W. Putney

When cells are activated by calcium-mobilizing agonists at low, physiological concentrations, the resulting calcium signals generally take the form of repetitive regenerative discharges of stored calcium, termed calcium oscillations [1]. These intracellular calcium oscillations have long fascinated biologists as a mode of digitized intracellular signaling. Recent work has highlighted the role of calcium influx as an essential component of calcium oscillations [2]. This influx occurs through a process known as store-operated calcium entry, which is initiated by calcium sensor proteins, STIM1 and STIM2, in the endoplasmic reticulum [3]. STIM2 is activated by changes in endoplasmic reticulum calcium near the resting level, whereas a threshold of calcium depletion is required for STIM1 activation [4]. Here we show that, surprisingly, it is STIM1 and not STIM2 that is exclusively involved in calcium entry during calcium oscillations. The implication is that each oscillation produces a transient drop in endoplasmic reticulum calcium and that this drop is sufficient to transiently activate STIM1. This transient activation of STIM1 can be observed in some cells by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. This arrangement nicely provides a clearly defined and unambiguous signaling system, translating a digital calcium release signal into calcium influx that can signal to downstream effectors.


Journal of Cell Science | 2007

Role of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the function of the store-operated Ca2+ channel activator, Stim1

Jeremy T. Smyth; Wayne I. DeHaven; Gary S. Bird; James W. Putney

We examined the role of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the localization and store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) function of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ sensor stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) in HEK 293 cells. STIM1 tagged with an enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP-STIM1) exhibited a fibrillar localization that colocalized with endogenous α-tubulin. Depolymerization of microtubules with nocodazole caused a change from a fibrillar EYFP-STIM1 localization to one that was similar to that of the ER. Treatment of HEK 293 cells with nocodazole had a detrimental impact on SOCE and the associated Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ current (ICRAC). This inhibition was significantly reversed in cells overexpressing EYFP-STIM1, implying that the primary inhibitory effect of nocodazole is related to STIM1 function. Surprisingly, nocodazole treatment alone induced significant SOCE and ICRAC in cells expressing EYFP-STIM1, and this was accompanied by an increase in EYFP-STIM1 fluorescence near the plasma membrane. We conclude that microtubules play a facilitative role in the SOCE signaling pathway by optimizing the localization of STIM1.

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James W. Putney

National Institutes of Health

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Guillermo Vazquez

National Institutes of Health

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Barbara J. Wedel

National Institutes of Health

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Jeremy T. Smyth

National Institutes of Health

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Mohamed Trebak

Pennsylvania State University

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Wayne I. DeHaven

National Institutes of Health

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Johnny Obie

National Institutes of Health

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Rebecca R. Boyles

National Institutes of Health

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John G. Petranka

National Institutes of Health

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