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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Nov 4.
Published in final edited form as: Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2019 Jun 10;11(11):a035071. doi: 10.1101/cshperspect.a035071

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Differences between desensitization of mammalian and sea urchin nicotinic acid adenine nucleotide diphosphate (NAADP) receptors. (A) Desensitization of sea urchin NAADP receptors (type 1 desensitization). The blue left panel traces show stylized Ca2+ dye fluorescence traces in response to increasing concentrations (conc.) of NAADP, which increases Ca2+ release represented by a classical sigmoid log concentration–response curve (blue line, right panel). However, preincubation with subthreshold concentrations of NAADP, that do not evoke Ca2+ release, desensitize Ca2+ release in a time and concentration manner, by subsequent challenge by a normally maximal NAADP (test) concentration (middle panel, and orange curve, right panel). (B) Desensitization of mammalian NAADP receptors (type 2 desensitization). Increasing concentrations of NAADP enhances Ca2+ release to a maximum (left and middle panels). Thereafter, increasing concentrations of NAADP evoke progressively smaller Ca2+ release to a point when no Ca2+ release is evoked at high NAADP concentrations. This “bell-shaped” or hormetic log concentration–response curve is shown in the right panel (blue curve).