Towards a predictive model of Ca²⁺ puffs


Autoria(s): Thul, Ruediger; Thurley, K.; Falcke, Martin
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

We investigate key characteristics of Ca²⁺ puffs in deterministic and stochastic frameworks that all incorporate the cellular morphology of IP[subscript]3 receptor channel clusters. In a first step, we numerically study Ca²⁺ liberation in a three dimensional representation of a cluster environment with reaction-diffusion dynamics in both the cytosol and the lumen. These simulations reveal that Ca²⁺ concentrations at a releasing cluster range from 80 µM to 170 µM and equilibrate almost instantaneously on the time scale of the release duration. These highly elevated Ca²⁺ concentrations eliminate Ca²⁺ oscillations in a deterministic model of an IP[subscript]3R channel cluster at physiological parameter values as revealed by a linear stability analysis. The reason lies in the saturation of all feedback processes in the IP[subscript]3R gating dynamics, so that only fluctuations can restore experimentally observed Ca²⁺ oscillations. In this spirit, we derive master equations that allow us to analytically quantify the onset of Ca²⁺ puffs and hence the stochastic time scale of intracellular Ca²⁺ dynamics. Moving up the spatial scale, we suggest to formulate cellular dynamics in terms of waiting time distribution functions. This approach prevents the state space explosion that is typical for the description of cellular dynamics based on channel states and still contains information on molecular fluctuations. We illustrate this method by studying global Ca²⁺ oscillations.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/1131/1/Thul-Thurley-Falcke-Chaos-final.pdf

Thul, Ruediger and Thurley, K. and Falcke, Martin (2009) Towards a predictive model of Ca²⁺ puffs. Chaos, 19 . 037108. ISSN 1054-1500

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

American Institute of Physics

Relação

http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/1131/

http://link.aip.org/link/?CHAOEH/19/037108/1

10.1063/1.3183809

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed