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Dive into the research topics where Gustavo Brum is active.

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Featured researches published by Gustavo Brum.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2003

Ca2+ Sparks and Embers of Mammalian Muscle. Properties of the Sources

Jin Song Zhou; Gustavo Brum; Adom González; Bradley S. Launikonis; Michael D. Stern; Eduardo Ríos

Ca2+ sparks of membrane-permeabilized rat muscle cells were analyzed to derive properties of their sources. Most events identified in longitudinal confocal line scans looked like sparks, but 23% (1,000 out of 4,300) were followed by long-lasting embers. Some were preceded by embers, and 48 were “lone embers.” Average spatial width was ∼2 μm in the rat and 1.5 μm in frog events in analogous solutions. Amplitudes were 33% smaller and rise times 50% greater in the rat. Differences were highly significant. The greater spatial width was not a consequence of greater open time of the rat source, and was greatest at the shortest rise times, suggesting a wider Ca2+ source. In the rat, but not the frog, spark width was greater in scans transversal to the fiber axis. These features suggested that rat spark sources were elongated transversally. Ca2+ release was calculated in averages of sparks with long embers. Release current during the averaged ember started at 3 or 7 pA (depending on assumptions), whereas in lone embers it was 0.7 or 1.3 pA, which suggests that embers that trail sparks start with five open channels. Analysis of a spark with leading ember yielded a current ratio ranging from 37 to 160 in spark and ember, as if 37–160 channels opened in the spark. In simulations, 25–60 pA of Ca2+ current exiting a point source was required to reproduce frog sparks. 130 pA, exiting a cylindric source of 3 μm, qualitatively reproduced rat sparks. In conclusion, sparks of rat muscle require a greater current than frog sparks, exiting a source elongated transversally to the fiber axis, constituted by 35–260 channels. Not infrequently, a few of those remain open and produce the trailing ember.


The Journal of Physiology | 2005

Confocal imaging of [Ca2+] in cellular organelles by SEER, shifted excitation and emission ratioing of fluorescence

Bradley S. Launikonis; Jingsong Zhou; Leandro Royer; Thomas R. Shannon; Gustavo Brum; Eduardo Ríos

Intracellular calcium signals regulate multiple cellular functions. They depend on release of Ca2+ from cellular stores into the cytosol, a process that appears to be tightly controlled by changes in [Ca2+] within the store. A method to image free [Ca2+] within cellular organelles was devised, which provided the first quantitative confocal images of [Ca2+] inside the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of skeletal muscle. The method exploits, for greater sensitivity, the dual spectral shifts that some fluorescent dyes undergo upon binding Ca2+. It was implemented with mag‐indo‐1 trapped in the intracellular organelles of frog skeletal muscle and validated showing that it largely monitors [Ca2+] in a caffeine‐sensitive compartment with the structure of the SR cisternae. A tentative calibration in situ demonstrated an increase in the dyes dissociation constant, not unlike that observed for other dyes in cellular environments. This increase, together with other characteristics of the ratioing method, placed the half‐signal [Ca2+] near 1 mm, a value suitable for cellular stores. Demonstrated advantages of the technique include accuracy (that of a calibrated ratiometric method), dynamic range and sensitivity (from the combination of two spectral shifts), spatial and temporal resolution, and compatibility with a vast array of visible dyes to monitor diverse aspects of cellular function. SEER (shifted excitation and emission ratioing) also provides a [Ca2+]‐independent measure of dye concentration in the cell. Store and mitochondrial [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]SR and [Ca2+]mito) could be measured separately using the high spatial resolution of SEER. Evolution of [Ca2+]SR was followed upon changes in cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]cyto). At [Ca2+]cyto= 100 nm, [Ca2+]mito remained near the lower limit of detection and [Ca2+]SR stabilized at values that were submillimolar according to our tentative calibration. Steady [Ca2+]SR was only slightly higher in 800 nm[Ca2+]cyto, and essentially did not decrease unless [Ca2+]cyto was reduced below 10 nm. While the increase of [Ca2+]SR was limited by loss through Ca2+ release channels, its decrease in low [Ca2+]cyto was largely dependent on leaks through the SR Ca2+ pump.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Ca2+ sparks operated by membrane depolarization require isoform 3 ryanodine receptor channels in skeletal muscle

Sandrine Pouvreau; Leandro Royer; Jianxun Yi; Gustavo Brum; Gerhard Meissner; Eduardo Ríos; Jingsong Zhou

Stimuli are translated to intracellular calcium signals via opening of inositol trisphosphate receptor and ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels of the sarcoplasmic reticulum or endoplasmic reticulum. In cardiac and skeletal muscle of amphibians the stimulus is depolarization of the transverse tubular membrane, transduced by voltage sensors at tubular–sarcoplasmic reticulum junctions, and the unit signal is the Ca2+ spark, caused by concerted opening of multiple RyR channels. Mammalian muscles instead lose postnatally the ability to produce sparks, and they also lose RyR3, an isoform abundant in spark-producing skeletal muscles. What does it take for cells to respond to membrane depolarization with Ca2+ sparks? To answer this question we made skeletal muscles of adult mice expressing exogenous RyR3, demonstrated as immunoreactivity at triad junctions. These muscles showed abundant sparks upon depolarization. Sparks produced thusly were found to amplify the response to depolarization in a manner characteristic of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release processes. The amplification was particularly effective in responses to brief depolarizations, as in action potentials. We also induced expression of exogenous RyR1 or yellow fluorescent protein-tagged RyR1 in muscles of adult mice. In these, tag fluorescence was present at triad junctions. RyR1-transfected muscle lacked voltage-operated sparks. Therefore, the voltage-operated sparks phenotype is specific to the RyR3 isoform. Because RyR3 does not contact voltage sensors, their opening was probably activated by Ca2+, secondarily to Ca2+ release through junctional RyR1. Physiologically voltage-controlled Ca2+ sparks thus require a voltage sensor, a master junctional RyR1 channel that provides trigger Ca2+, and a slave parajunctional RyR3 cohort.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2004

Regulation of Ca2+ Sparks by Ca2+ and Mg2+ in Mammalian and Amphibian Muscle. An RyR Isoform-specific Role in Excitation–Contraction Coupling?

Jingsong Zhou; Bradley S. Launikonis; Eduardo Ríos; Gustavo Brum

Ca2+ and Mg2+ are important mediators and regulators of intracellular Ca2+ signaling in muscle. The effects of changes of cytosolic [Ca2+] or [Mg2+] on elementary Ca2+ release events were determined, as functions of concentration and time, in single fast-twitch permeabilized fibers of rat and frog. Ca2+ sparks were identified and their parameters measured in confocal images of fluo-4 fluorescence. Solutions with different [Ca2+] or [Mg2+] were rapidly exchanged while imaging. Faster and spatially homogeneous changes of [Ca2+] (reaching peaks >100 μM) were achieved by photolysing Ca NP-EGTA with laser flashes. In both species, incrementing cytosolic [Ca2+] caused a steady, nearly proportional increase in spark frequency, reversible upon [Ca2+] reduction. A greater change in spark frequency, usually transient, followed sudden increases in [Ca2+] after a lag of 100 ms or more. The nonlinearity, lag, and other features of this delayed effect suggest that it requires increase of [Ca2+] inside the SR. In the frog only, increases in cytosolic [Ca2+] often resulted, after a lag, in sparks that propagated transversally. An increase in [Mg2+] caused a fall of spark frequency, but with striking species differences. In the rat, but not the frog, sparks were observed at 4–40 mM [Mg2+]. Reducing [Mg2+] below 2 mM, which should enable the RyR channels activation (CICR) site to bind Ca2+, caused progressive increase in spark frequency in the frog, but had no effect in the rat. Spark propagation and enhancement by sub-mM Mg2+ are hallmarks of CICR. Their absence in the rat suggests that CICR requires RyR3 para-junctional clusters, present only in the frog. The observed frequency of sparks corresponds to a channel open probability of 10−7 in the frog or 10−8 in the rat. Together with the failure of photorelease to induce activation directly, this indicates a basal inhibition of channels in situ. It is proposed that relief of this inhibition could be the mechanism by which increased SR load increases spark frequency.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2011

Measurement of RyR permeability reveals a role of calsequestrin in termination of SR Ca 2+ release in skeletal muscle

Monika Sztretye; Jianxun Yi; Lourdes Figueroa; Jingsong Zhou; Leandro Royer; Paul D. Allen; Gustavo Brum; Eduardo Ríos

The mechanisms that terminate Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum are not fully understood. D4cpv-Casq1 (Sztretye et al. 2011. J. Gen. Physiol. doi:10.1085/jgp.201010591) was used in mouse skeletal muscle cells under voltage clamp to measure free Ca2+ concentration inside the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), [Ca2+]SR, simultaneously with that in the cytosol, [Ca2+]c, during the response to long-lasting depolarization of the plasma membrane. The ratio of Ca2+ release flux (derived from [Ca2+]c(t)) over the gradient that drives it (essentially equal to [Ca2+]SR) provided directly, for the first time, a dynamic measure of the permeability to Ca2+ of the releasing SR membrane. During maximal depolarization, flux rapidly rises to a peak and then decays. Before 0.5 s, [Ca2+]SR stabilized at ∼35% of its resting level; depletion was therefore incomplete. By 0.4 s of depolarization, the measured permeability decayed to ∼10% of maximum, indicating ryanodine receptor channel closure. Inactivation of the t tubule voltage sensor was immeasurably small by this time and thus not a significant factor in channel closure. In cells of mice null for Casq1, permeability did not decrease in the same way, indicating that calsequestrin (Casq) is essential in the mechanism of channel closure and termination of Ca2+ release. The absence of this mechanism explains why the total amount of calcium releasable by depolarization is not greatly reduced in Casq-null muscle (Royer et al. 2010. J. Gen. Physiol. doi:10.1085/jgp.201010454). When the fast buffer BAPTA was introduced in the cytosol, release flux became more intense, and the SR emptied earlier. The consequent reduction in permeability accelerated as well, reaching comparable decay at earlier times but comparable levels of depletion. This observation indicates that [Ca2+]SR, sensed by Casq and transmitted to the channels presumably via connecting proteins, is determinant to cause the closure that terminates Ca2+ release.


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2006

The elusive role of store depletion in the control of intracellular calcium release

Eduardo Ríos; Bradley S. Launikonis; Leandro Royer; Gustavo Brum; Jingsong Zhou

The contractile cycle of striated muscles, skeletal and cardiac, is controlled by a cytosolic [Ca2+] transient that requires rapid movements of the ion through channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). A functional signature of these channels is their closure after a stereotyped time lapse of Ca2+ release. In cardiac muscle there is abundant evidence that termination of release is mediated by depletion of the Ca2+ store, even if the linkage mechanism remains unknown. By contrast, in skeletal muscle the mechanisms of release termination are not understood. This article reviews measurements of store depletion, the experimental evidence for dependence of Ca2+ release on the [Ca2+] level inside the SR, as well as tests of the molecular nature of putative intra-store Ca2+ sensors. Because Ca2+ sparks exhibit the basic release termination mechanism, much attention is dedicated to the studies of store depletion caused by sparks and its relationship with termination of sparks. The review notes the striking differences in volume, content and buffering power of the stores in cardiac vs. skeletal muscle, differences that explain why functional depletion is much greater for cardiac than skeletal muscle stores. Because in skeletal muscle store depletion is minimal and reduction in store [Ca2+] does not appear to greatly inhibit Ca2+ release, it is concluded that decrease in free SR [Ca2+] does not mediate physiological termination of Ca2+ release in this type of muscle. In spite of the apparent absence of store depletion and its putative channel closing effect, termination of Ca2+ sparks is faster and more robust in skeletal than cardiac muscle. A gating role of a hypothetical “proximate store” constituted by polymers of calsequestrin and associated proteins is invoked in an attempt to preserve a role for store depletion and unify mechanisms in both types of striated muscle.


Archive | 1988

The Voltage Sensor of Skeletal Muscle Excitation-Contraction Coupling: A Comparison with Ca 2+ Channels

Gonzalo Pizarro; Gustavo Brum; M. Fill; Robert H. Fitts; M. Rodriguez; I Uribe; Eduardo Ríos

A recent development in the study of Ca2+ channels is the realization [2, 44] that skeletal muscle Ca2+ channels have a number of properties in common with the voltage sensor of excitation-contraction (Ee) coupling, the molecule or structure of skeletal muscle membrane that has the role of sensing the action potential to control the opening of the Ca2+ release channels of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR).


The Journal of Physiology | 2012

Synthetic localized calcium transients directly probe signalling mechanisms in skeletal muscle

Lourdes Figueroa; Vyacheslav M. Shkryl; Jingsong Zhou; Carlo Manno; Atsuya Momotake; Gustavo Brum; Lothar A. Blatter; Graham C. R. Ellis-Davies; Eduardo Ríos

•  The signal for skeletal muscle contraction is a rapid increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, which requires the coordinated opening of ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. •  Channel opening is controlled by voltage‐sensing dihydropyridine receptors (DHPRs) of plasma membrane and T tubules. Whether or not their signal is amplified by Ca2+‐induced Ca2+ release (CICR) is controversial. •  We used two‐photon lysis of an advanced Ca2+ cage to produce local Ca2+ concentration transients that were large, fast, reproducible and quantifiable, while monitoring the cellular response with a dual confocal laser scanner. •  Single frog muscle cells in physiological solutions responded to transients greater than 0.28 μm with propagated CICR waves. •  Mouse cells did not respond to stimuli up to 8 μm, unless channel opening drugs were present. •  We conclude that CICR contributes to physiological Ca2+ release in frog but not mouse muscle. •  Mice and presumably other mammals do have a capability for CICR that is normally inhibited. It could be manifested under special circumstances, including diseases.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2005

Concerted vs. Sequential. Two Activation Patterns of Vast Arrays of Intracellular Ca2+ Channels in Muscle

Jin Song Zhou; Gustavo Brum; Adom González; Bradley S. Launikonis; Michael D. Stern; Eduardo Ríos

To signal cell responses, Ca2+ is released from storage through intracellular Ca2+ channels. Unlike most plasmalemmal channels, these are clustered in quasi-crystalline arrays, which should endow them with unique properties. Two distinct patterns of local activation of Ca2+ release were revealed in images of Ca2+ sparks in permeabilized cells of amphibian muscle. In the presence of sulfate, an anion that enters the SR and precipitates Ca2+, sparks became wider than in the conventional, glutamate-based solution. Some of these were “protoplatykurtic” (had a flat top from early on), suggesting an extensive array of channels that activate simultaneously. Under these conditions the rate of production of signal mass was roughly constant during the rise time of the spark and could be as high as 5 μm3 ms−1, consistent with a release current >50 pA since the beginning of the event. This pattern, called “concerted activation,” was observed also in rat muscle fibers. When sulfate was combined with a reduced cytosolic [Ca2+] (50 nM) these sparks coexisted (and interfered) with a sequential progression of channel opening, probably mediated by Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR). Sequential propagation, observed only in frogs, may require parajunctional channels, of RyR isoform β, which are absent in the rat. Concerted opening instead appears to be a property of RyR α in the amphibian and the homologous isoform 1 in the mammal.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2008

Calcium-dependent Inactivation Terminates Calcium Release in Skeletal Muscle of Amphibians

Eduardo Ríos; Jingsong Zhou; Gustavo Brum; Bradley S. Launikonis; Michael D. Stern

In skeletal muscle of amphibians, the cell-wide cytosolic release of calcium that enables contraction in response to an action potential appears to be built of Ca2+ sparks. The mechanism that rapidly terminates this release was investigated by studying the termination of Ca2+ release underlying sparks. In groups of thousands of sparks occurring spontaneously in membrane-permeabilized frog muscle cells a complex relationship was found between amplitude a and rise time T, which in sparks corresponds to the active time of the underlying Ca2+ release. This relationship included a range of T where a paradoxically decreased with increasing T. Three different methods were used to estimate Ca2+ release flux in groups of sparks of different T. Using every method, it was found that T and flux were inversely correlated, roughly inversely proportional. A simple model in which release sources were inactivated by cytosolic Ca2+ was able to explain the relationship. The predictive value of the model, evaluated by analyzing the variance of spark amplitude, was found to be high when allowance was made for the out-of-focus error contribution to the total variance. This contribution was estimated using a theory of confocal scanning (Ríos, E., N. Shirokova, W.G. Kirsch, G. Pizarro, M.D. Stern, H. Cheng, and A. González. Biophys. J. 2001. 80:169–183), which was confirmed in the present work by simulated line scanning of simulated sparks. Considering these results and other available evidence it is concluded that Ca2+-dependent inactivation, or CDI, provides the crucial mechanism for termination of sparks and cell-wide Ca2+ release in amphibians. Given the similarities in kinetics of release termination observed in cell-averaged records of amphibian and mammalian muscle, and in spite of differences in activation mechanisms, CDI is likely to play a central role in mammals as well. Trivially, an inverse proportionality between release flux and duration, in sparks or in global release of skeletal muscle, maintains constancy of the amount of released Ca2+.

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Gonzalo Pizarro

Rush University Medical Center

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Leandro Royer

Rush University Medical Center

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Michael D. Stern

National Institutes of Health

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Adom González

Rush University Medical Center

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Graham C. R. Ellis-Davies

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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