The Sodium-Calcium Exchanger Controls the Membrane Potential of AFT024: A Mesenchymal Stem Cell Hematopoietic Niche Forming Line

Bioelectricity. 2022 May 26;4(2):103-107. doi: 10.1089/bioe.2022.0015. eCollection 2022 May.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to characterize the functional expression of sodium-calcium exchangers on AFT024 cell line, a murine model of mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) supporting human primitive hematopoiesis. All current-clamp and voltage-clamp experiments were performed using the perforated patch whole-cell recording technique with amphotericin B. The membrane potential of -14 mV shifted to -35 mV when lowering the external sodium concentration to 0.33 mM and an increase of cytosolic calcium concentration was observed. KB-R7943, a selective blocker of cardiac sodium-calcium exchangers, also named NCX1, induced a hyperpolarization at physiological sodium concentration while it blocked the hyperpolarization observed at low sodium concentration. This demonstrates for the first time the presence of the sodium-calcium exchangers in AFT024 cells and provides initial evidence that the membrane potential of these stromal cells is maintained depolarized by this exchanger. Lowering external sodium concentration and KB-R7943 had no effect on the membrane potential of 2018 cells, a nonhematopoietic-supportive cell line. Since NCX1 is differentially expressed in AFT024 cells as compared with nonhematopoietic supportive cells with more restricted differentiation potential, this study suggests a potential role of this sodium-calcium exchanger, in the differentiation process or hematopoietic support of MSCs.

Keywords: NCX1; calcium; membrane potential; stem cells.