Matti Weckström
University of Oulu
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Featured researches published by Matti Weckström.
Circulation | 1998
István Szokodi; Pietari Kinnunen; Pasi Tavi; Matti Weckström; Miklós Tóth; Heikki Ruskoaho
BACKGROUND Adrenomedullin (ADM), a new vasorelaxing and natriuretic peptide, may function as an endogenous regulator of cardiac function, because ADM and its binding sites have been found in the heart. We characterize herein the cardiac effects of ADM as well as the underlying signaling pathways in vitro. METHODS AND RESULTS In isolated perfused, paced rat heart preparation, infusion of ADM at concentrations of 0.1 to 1 nmol/L for 30 minutes induced a dose-dependent, gradual increase in developed tension, whereas proadrenomedullin N-20 (PAMP; 10 to 100 nmol/L), a peptide derived from the same gene as ADM, had no effect. The ADM-induced positive inotropic effect was not altered by a calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist, CGRP8-37, or H-89, a cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor. ADM also failed to stimulate ventricular cAMP content of the perfused hearts. Ryanodine (3 nmol/L), a sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release channel opener, suppressed the overall ADM-induced positive inotropic effect. Pretreatment with thapsigargin (30 nmol/L), which inhibits sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase and depletes intracellular Ca2+ stores, attenuated the early increase in developed tension produced by ADM. In addition, inhibition of protein kinase C by staurosporine (10 nmol/L) and blockade of L-type Ca2+ channels by diltiazem (1 micromol/L) significantly decreased the sustained phase of ADM-induced increase in developed tension. Superfusion of atrial myocytes with ADM (1 nmol/L) in isolated left atrial preparations resulted in a marked prolongation of action potential duration between 10 and -50 mV transmembrane voltage, consistent with an increase in L-type Ca2+ channel current during the plateau. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that ADM enhances cardiac contractility via cAMP-independent mechanisms including Ca2+ release from intracellular ryanodine- and thapsigargin-sensitive Ca2+ stores, activation of protein kinase C, and Ca2+ influx through L-type Ca2+ channels.
Journal of Comparative Physiology A-neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology | 1993
Simon B. Laughlin; Matti Weckström
Abstract1.From a comparison of the photoresponses and membrane properties of photoreceptors from 20 species of Diptera, we conclude that coding in the time domain is matched to the dictates of visual ecology. This matching involves the dynamics of phototransduction and the use of an appropriate mix of potassium conductances to tune the photoreceptor membrane.2.Rapidly flying, manoeuvrable diurnal Diptera from several families have fast photoreceptors, with corner frequencies (the frequency at which signal power falls by a half) of between 50 and 107 Hz. The ponderous and predominantly nocturnal tipulids have slow photoreceptors with fully light adapted corner frequencies of 16 to 19 Hz.3.Dark adapted fast photoreceptors have a lower gain (as indicated by lower noise levels), a lower sensitivity, and light adapt more rapidly than dark adapted slow photoreceptors. Fast cells also have much lower input resistances and shorter time constants.4.Fast photoreceptors rectify more strongly in the steady state because of a weakly inactivating delayed rectifier potassium conductance with fast and slow components of activation. Slow photoreceptors rectify less strongly in the steady state because their membrane properties are dominated by strongly inactivating outward currents with reversal potentials in the range — 80 to -90 mV.5.The differences between potassium conductances match the differing functional requirements of fast and slow photoreceptors. The non-inactivating delayed rectifier promotes the rapid response of fast cells by reducing the membrane time constant. This is an expensive strategy, involving large conductances and currents. Slowly flying nocturnal insects do not require a high speed of response. The potassium conductances in their slow photoreceptors inactivate to avoid costly and unnecessary ion fluxes.8.Both the dynamics of the photoresponse and photoreceptor membrane properties exhibit sexual dimorphism. Light adapted photoreceptors in the enlarged male dorsal eye of Bibio markii have a corner frequency of 42 Hz, compared with 27 Hz for cells in the smaller female eye. This difference in frequency response correlates with the males higher spatial acuity and is accompanied by consistent differences in potassium conductance activation rate. We conclude that the divison between fast and slow cells is the product of cellular constraints, metabolic costs and the requirements of coding efficiency at different light levels and retinal image velocities.
Trends in Neurosciences | 1996
Mikko Juusola; Andrew S. French; R. O. Uusitalo; Matti Weckström
Many neurons use graded membrane-potential changes, instead of action potentials, to transmit information. Traditional synaptic models feature discontinuous transmitter release by presynaptic action potentials, but this is not true for synapses between graded-potential neurons. In addition to graded and continuous transmitter release, they have multiple active zones, ribbon formations and L-type Ca2+ channels. These differences are probably linked to the high rate of vesicle fusion required for continuous transmitter release. Early stages of sensory systems provide some of the best characterized graded-potential neurons, and recent work on these systems suggests that modification of synaptic transmission by adaptation is a powerful feature of graded synapses.
Trends in Neurosciences | 1995
Matti Weckström; Simon B. Laughlin
That particular membrane conductances are selected for expression to enable the efficient coding of biologically relevant signals is illustrated by recent work on insect photoreceptors. These studies exploit the richness of insect vision and the accessibility of insect photoreceptors to cellular analysis in both intact animal and isolated cell preparations. The distribution of voltage-gated conductances among photoreceptors of different species correlates with visual ecology. Delayed-rectifier K+ channels are found in the rapidly responding photoreceptors of fast-flying flies. The conductances activation range and dynamics match light-induced signals, and enable a rapid response by reducing the membrane time constant. Slow-moving flies have slowly responding photoreceptors that lack the delayed rectifier, but express an inactivating K+ conductance that is metabolically less demanding. Complementing these findings, locust photoreceptor membranes are modulated diurnally. The delayed rectifier is exhibited during the day and the inactivating K+ current is exhibited at night. Insect photoreceptors also demonstrate the amplification of signals by voltage-gated Na+ channels. In drone-bee photoreceptors, voltage-gated Na+ channels combine with K+ channels to enhance the small transient signals produced by the image of a queen bee passing over the retina. This subthreshold amplifier operates most effectively over the range of light intensities at which drones pursue queens.
Circulation Research | 1998
Pasi Tavi; Chunlei Han; Matti Weckström
To study the effects of stretch on the function of rat left atrium, we recorded contraction force, calcium transients, and intracellular action potentials (APs) during stretch manipulations. The stretch of the atrium was controlled by intra-atrial pressure. The Frank-Starling behavior of the atrium was manifested as a biphasic increase of the contraction force after increasing the stretch level. The development of the contraction force after step increase of the stretch (intra-atrial pressure from 1 to 3 mm Hg) was accompanied by the increase in the amplitude of the calcium transients (P<0.05, n=4) and decrease in the time constant of the Ca2+ transient decay. The APs of the individual myocytes were also affected by stretch; the duration of the AP was decreased at positive voltages (AP duration at 15% repolarization level, P<0.001; n=13) and increased at negative voltages (AP duration at 90% repolarization level, P<0. 01; n=13). To study the mechanisms causing these changes we developed a mathematical model describing [Ca2+]i and electrical behavior of single rat atrial myocytes. Stretch was simulated in the model by increasing the troponin (TnC) sensitivity and/or applying a stretch-activated (SA) calcium influx. We mimicked the Ca2+ influx by introducing a nonselective cationic conductance, the SA channels, into the membrane. Neither of the 2 plausible mechanosensors (TnC or SA channels) alone could produce similar changes in the Ca2+ transients or APs as seen in the experiments. The model simulated the effects of stretch seen in experiments best when both the TnC affinity and the SA conductance activation were applied simultaneously. The SA channel activation led to gradual augmentation of Ca2+ transients, which modulated the APs through increased Na+/Ca2+-exchanger inward current. The role of TnC affinity change was to modulate the Ca2+ transients, stabilize the diastolic [Ca2+]i, and presumably to produce the immediate increase of the contraction force after stretch seen in experiments. Furthermore, we found that the same mechanism that caused the normal physiological responses to stretch could also generate arrhythmogenic afterpotentials at high stretch levels in the model.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Aare Rokka; Vasily D. Antonenkov; Raija Soininen; Hanna L. Immonen; Päivi Pirilä; Ulrich Bergmann; Raija Sormunen; Matti Weckström; Roland Benz; J. Kalervo Hiltunen
Background Peroxisomal metabolic machinery requires a continuous flow of organic and inorganic solutes across peroxisomal membrane. Concerning small solutes, the molecular nature of their traffic has remained an enigma. Methods/Principal Findings In this study, we show that disruption in mice of the Pxmp2 gene encoding Pxmp2, which belongs to a family of integral membrane proteins with unknown function, leads to partial restriction of peroxisomal membrane permeability to solutes in vitro and in vivo. Multiple-channel recording of liver peroxisomal preparations reveals that the channel-forming components with a conductance of 1.3 nS in 1.0 M KCl were lost in Pxmp2 −/− mice. The channel-forming properties of Pxmp2 were confirmed with recombinant protein expressed in insect cells and with native Pxmp2 purified from mouse liver. The Pxmp2 channel, with an estimated diameter of 1.4 nm, shows weak cation selectivity and no voltage dependence. The long-lasting open states of the channel indicate its functional role as a protein forming a general diffusion pore in the membrane. Conclusions/Significance Pxmp2 is the first peroxisomal channel identified, and its existence leads to prediction that the mammalian peroxisomal membrane is permeable to small solutes while transfer of “bulky” metabolites, e.g., cofactors (NAD/H, NADP/H, and CoA) and ATP, requires specific transporters.
Nature | 2003
Jeremy E. Niven; Mikko Vähäsöyrinki; Mika Kauranen; Roger C. Hardie; Mikko Juusola; Matti Weckström
An array of rapidly inactivating voltage-gated K+ channels is distributed throughout the nervous systems of vertebrates and invertebrates. Although these channels are thought to regulate the excitability of neurons by attenuating voltage signals, their specific functions are often poorly understood. We studied the role of the prototypical inactivating K+ conductance, Shaker, in Drosophila photoreceptors by recording intracellularly from wild-type and Shaker mutant photoreceptors. Here we show that loss of the Shaker K+ conductance produces a marked reduction in the signal-to-noise ratio of photoreceptors, generating a 50% decrease in the information capacity of these cells in fully light-adapted conditions. By combining experiments with modelling, we show that the inactivation of Shaker K+ channels amplifies voltage signals and enables photoreceptors to use their voltage range more effectively. Loss of the Shaker conductance attenuated the voltage signal and induced a compensatory decrease in impedance. Our results demonstrate the importance of the Shaker K+ conductance for neural coding precision and as a mechanism for selectively amplifying graded signals in neurons, and highlight the effect of compensatory mechanisms on neuronal information processing.
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2001
Pasi Tavi; Mika Laine; Matti Weckström; Heikki Ruskoaho
In heart muscle a mechanical stimulus is sensed and transformed into adaptive changes in cardiac function by a process called mechanotransduction. Adaptation of heart muscle to mechanical load consists of neurohumoral activation and growth, both of which decrease the initial load. Under prolonged overload this process becomes maladaptive, leading to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy and ultimately to heart failure. Widespread synergism and crosstalk among a variety of molecules and signals involved in hypertrophic signaling pathways make the prevention or treatment of left ventricular hypertrophy and heart failure a challenging task. Therapeutic strategies should include either a complete and continuous reduction of load or normalization of left ventricular mass by interventions aimed at specific targets involved in mechanotransduction.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Mikko Vähäsöyrinki; Jeremy E. Niven; Roger C. Hardie; Matti Weckström; Mikko Juusola
Determining the contribution of a single type of ion channel to information processing within a neuron requires not only knowledge of the properties of the channel but also understanding of its function within a complex system. We studied the contribution of slow delayed rectifier K+ channels to neural coding in Drosophila photoreceptors by combining genetic and electrophysiological approaches with biophysical modeling. We show that the Shab gene encodes the slow delayed rectifier K+ channel and identify a novel voltage-gated K+ conductance. Analysis of the in vivo recorded voltage responses together with their computer-simulated counterparts demonstrates that Shab channels in Drosophila photoreceptors attenuate the light-induced depolarization and prevent response saturation in bright light. We also show that reduction of the Shab conductance in mutant photoreceptors is accompanied by a proportional drop in their input resistance. This reduction in input resistance partially restores the signaling range, sensitivity, and dynamic coding of light intensities of Shab photoreceptors to those of the wild-type counterparts. However, loss of the Shab channels may affect both the energy efficiency of coding and the processing of natural stimuli. Our results highlight the role of different types of voltage-gated K+ channels in the performance of the photoreceptors and provide insight into functional robustness against the perturbation of specific ion channel composition.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Kyösti Heimonen; Iikka Salmela; Panu Kontiokari; Matti Weckström
The compound eyes of insects contain photoreceptors in small eyelets, ommatidia. The photoreceptors generally vary very little from ommatidium to ommatidium. However, in the large compound eyes of the cockroach (Periplaneta americana), previous studies have shown large differences in the optical structure between the ommatidia. The anatomy suggests pooling of 6–20 photoreceptor signals into one second-order cell in the first synapse. Here, we show and characterize an unexpectedly large and seemingly random functional variability in the cockroach photoreceptors in terms of sensitivity, adaptation speed, angular sensitivity, and signal-to-noise ratio. We also investigate the implications of action potentials, triggered by the light-induced membrane depolarization in the photoreceptor axons. The combination of the functional features reported here is unique among the compound eyes. Recordings from the proximal parts of the thin and long photoreceptor axons or small and distant second-order neurons are not practical with the present methods. To alleviate this lack of data, we used computer simulations mimicking the functional variability, spike coding, and pooling of 12 photoreceptor signals, on the basis of our recordings from the photoreceptor somata and distal axons. The predicted responses of a simulated second-order cell follow surprisingly reliably the simulated light stimuli when compared with a simulation of functionally identical photoreceptors. We hypothesize that cockroach photoreceptors use action potential coding and a kind of population coding scheme for making sense of the inherently unreliable light signals at low luminance and for optimization of vision in its mainly dim living conditions.