4.4 Article

Calcium-dependent inactivation and the dynamics of calcium puffs and sparks

Journal

JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 253, Issue 3, Pages 483-499

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.03.026

Keywords

calcium puffs; calcium sparks; calcium inactivation; Markov chain

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Localized intracellular Ca2+ elevations known as puffs and sparks arise from the cooperative activity of inositol 1,45-trisphosphate receptor Ca2+ Channels (IP(3)Rs) and ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channels (RyRs) clustered at Ca2+ release sites on the surface of the endoplasmic reticulum or sarcoplasmic reticulum. When Markov chain models of these intracellular Ca2+-regulated Ca2+ channels are coupled via a mathematical representation of a Ca2+ microdomain, simulated Ca2+ release sites may exhibit the phenomenon of stochastic Ca2+ excitability reminiscent of Ca2+ puffs and sparks where channels open and close in a concerted fashion. To clarify the role of Ca2+ inactivation of IP3Rs and RyRs in the dynamics of puffs and sparks, we formulate and analyze Markov chain models of Ca2+ release sites composed of 10-40 three-state intracellular Ca2+ channels that are inactivated as well as activated by Ca2+. We study how the statistics of simulated puffs and sparks depend on the kinetics and dissociation constant of Ca2+ inactivation and find that puffs and sparks are often less sensitive to variations in the number of channels at release sites and strength of coupling via local [Ca2+] when the average fraction of inactivated channels is significant. Interestingly, we observe that the single channel kinetics of Ca2+ inactivation influences the thermodynamic entropy production rate of Markov chain models of puffs and sparks. While excessively fast Ca2+ inactivation can preclude puffs and sparks, moderately fast Ca2+ inactivation often leads to time-irreversible puffs and sparks whose termination is facilitated by the recruitment of inactivated channels throughout the duration of the puff/spark event. On the other hand, Ca2+ inactivation may be an important negative feedback mechanism even when its time constant is much greater than the duration of puffs and sparks. In fact, Slow Ca2+ inactivation can lead to release sites with a substantial fraction of inactivated channels that exhibit puffs and sparks that are nearly time-reversible and terminate without additional recruitment of inactivated channels. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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