Maintenance of the cell volume within physiological limits under anisosmotic conditions is an important prerequisite for survival
and functioning of the cell. Cell volume alterations are also involved in numerous cellular events and are recently considered
to be integrated into a physiological signal transduction network. Cell swelling induced by anisosmotic environment, hormones,
oxidative stress, or substrate uptake evokes an immediate secretory burst of the material (peptide hormones, enzymes) stored
in secretory vesicles from various types of cells (endocrine cells, neurons, leukocytes, exocrine pancreatic cells). The dynamics
of this secretion are indistinguishable from those induced by specific secretagogues. This regulated secretion does not require
a rise in the intracellular Ca
2+. Using various tissues (pituitary, pancreatic islets, brain structures), hormones (prolactin, insulin, thyrotropin - releasing
hormone - TRH, oxytocin), and inhibitors, we found that hormone secretion induced by cell swelling is not depressed by inhibition
of stretch-activated channels (GdCl
3), mercury-sensitive aquaporins, protein kinase C (bisindolylmaleimide), microtubules and microfilaments (colchicine, cytochalasin)and
does not involve arachidonic acid metabolites, prostaglandins and leukotrienes (indomethacin, NDGA). The blockade of Na
+-K
+-dependent ATPase, that of Na
+ channels, or that of K
+ channels exerted no effect on hyposmolarity-induced hormone secretion in pituitary cells. Norepinephrine, a physiological
inhibitor of secretion of insulin, did not inhibit hypotonicity-induced secretion from pancreatic islets. The participation
of such a general biophysical phenomenon in physiological reactions raises a question of its specificity. Cell swelling induced
by an isosmotic ethanol-containing medium evoked release of TRH from hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and posterior pituitary,
while oxytocin (known to be engaged in the water and salt regulation) release was not stimulated.
Keywords cell swelling - exocytosis - signaling pathway - calcium
Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 37, No. 2, pp. 177–180, March–April, 2005.