Alterations in extracellular osmolality have powerful inverse effects on basal and potassium- and angiotensin-stimulated aldosterone secretion. With the use of bovine glomerulosa cells grown in primary culture, the effects of alterations in osmolality on cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca2+]c), efflux and uptake of 45Ca2+, and aldosterone secretion were determined. Alterations in osmolality, independent of sodium concentration, have inverse effects on aldosterone secretion, which are correlated with simultaneous changes in [Ca2+]c measured using fura-2. Reductions in osmolality cause dose-dependent biphasic increases in [Ca2+]c different from the monophasic increases in [Ca2+]c produced by increases in potassium concentration. Like potassium- and angiotensin-stimulated increases in [Ca2+]c, hypotonically induced increases in [Ca2+]c are associated with an increase in 45Ca2+ efflux. Reductions in osmolality also increased the uptake of 45Ca2+, an effect apparent at 2 min and persistent for at least 30 min. In the absence of extracellular calcium, reductions in osmolality, as increases in potassium concentration but not angiotensin, fail to increase [Ca2+]c, efflux of 45Ca2+, or aldosterone secretion. In conclusion, osmolality-induced alterations in aldosterone secretion are associated with parallel changes in [Ca2+]c, effects caused by alteration in the influx of extracellular calcium. On the basis of these and previous studies, we hypothesize that osmolality affects calcium influx by activating voltage-dependent or stretch-activated calcium channels.
Disturbances in acid-base balance in vivo are associated with changes in plasma aldosterone concentration, and in vitro changes in extracellular pH (pH o signal and increasing the sensitivity of a more distal site to intracellular Ca 2+ . The latter action appears to be a more important determinant in the effects of pH o on AngII-stimulated aldosterone secretion.
In humans with diabetes mellitus or in individuals given infusions of insulin or insulin plus glucose, plasma aldosterone levels have been reported to be suppressed. Whether insulin has a direct effect to suppress aldosterone secretion by the adrenal gland has not been established. The effect of insulin on glucose-induced inhibition of angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion was examined. The effect of glucose and insulin plus glucose on angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion was examined in isolated perfused canine adrenal glands. In the absence of insulin, 15.6 mM glucose decreased angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion by 35 +/- 7%, while in the presence of insulin the same glucose concentration had no significant effect on angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. In contrast, insulin had no effect on NaCl-induced inhibition of angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. Neither insulin alone nor saline vehicle affected angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. These results (1) demonstrate that insulin can prevent inhibition of glucose-induced angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion, possibly by preventing a glucose-induced decrease in cell volume, and (2) suggest that the suppressed plasma level of aldosterone found in individuals with diabetes mellitus may in part be due to the direct effects of hyperglycemia on the adrenal gland secretion of aldosterone.
Alterations in extracellular osmolality have a powerful inverse effect on aldosterone secretion and potassium- and angiotensin-stimulated aldosterone secretion. Whether alterations in extracellular osmolality produced sustained changes in cell volume that may contribute to the regulation of aldosterone secretion is not known. Using dispersed bovine glomerulosa cells grown in primary culture, the effect of alterations in osmolality on cell volume, measured by the distribution of [14C]urea and [3H]inulin and videometric analysis of the surface area of glomerulosa cells, was determined. Alterations in osmolality had an inverse effect on cell volume and surface area. Changes in cell volume induced by exposure to anisotonic medium were 52% greater (P > 0.02) than that predicted by the changes in osmolality. Increases in potassium concentration also caused sustained (1-h) concentration-dependent increases in cell volume and surface area. Angiotensin-II did not increase glomerulosa cell volume, but did produce a small dose-dependent transient increase in cell surface area. The results demonstrate that alterations in osmolality do cause sustained changes in cell volume, and thus, membrane stretch could be an important part of the cellular mechanism responsible for causing osmolality-induced changes in the cytosolic calcium concentration and subsequent alterations in aldosterone secretion. Alterations in membrane stretch may also be an important component of potassium-induced, but not angiotensin II-induced, aldosterone secretion.
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