Title: Calcium dynamics in dendritic spine and spine motility
1Calcium dynamics in dendritic spine and spine
motility
David Holcman Dept. of mathematics, Weizmann
Institute of Science
2Collaborators
- E. Korkotian, Weizmann Institute of Science
- M Segal, Weizmann Institute of Science
- Z. Schuss, Tel Aviv University
3Harris
4(No Transcript)
5Spine fast motility
Korkotian et.al, Neuron 2001
6Aims
- Based spine fast motility at a molecular level
- Study calcium dynamics
-
- Model the coupling between calcium dynamics and
Spine motility - Consequence of the model?Computed bonds of Ca
to molecule, involved in induction of plasticity
7Talk organization
I. Physiological evidence of fast motility -
movement - Spine contents
II. Modeling Calcium dynamics - At a
molecular - a nonlinear effect
III. From model to the simulations comparaison
with experimental data - Time course Ca2
(t)
8I-Physiological evidence of fast motility
9Spine fast motility
10Spine fast contraction
11Fast motility is induced by Ca binding to actin
type molecule
12Spine contents
- Ca sensitive molecule CaM, Buffers,
- Actin, Myosins
- Actin filament
- Channels, Pumps
- Organelles, ER
13Shape of a dentritic
R
- RRadius of the head lt1,5 µ m
- Llength of the neck 0 1,5 µ m
- F0.1, 0.6 µ m
l
?
14Modeling Calcium dynamics
15Langevin dynamics
- Neglect electrostatic interaction V(x)0
- V(x,t) flow field
- Need to restore binding interactions
16Spine Model
- CaM, Actin Myosin interactions
- Calcineurin
- Pumps
- Absorption of ions at the dendrite site
17Schematic model
18Molecular rules
- When an ion meet a molecule
- Calibration of the radius R
- Mean Time to stay backward binding rate
- (Poisson Process)
- 4 ions at a Actin-Myosin create a drift of
amplitude
19Dynamics and model of the drift
- Contraction produce a flow field for the free
ions - Vhydrodynamical flow due to the cytoplasm
incompressibility - N(t)number of molecules containing 4 Ca ions
20Hydrodynamics effect
- Using the Greens function
21Fokker-Planck equations
- Evolution of the concentration
-
22Time scale
- Hydrodynamic Time scale
- Diffusion Time Scale
- Diffusion and reaction
23Summary
- Nonlinear effectbond calcium induce a
contraction for free calcium - Two times scales
24From model to the simulations comparaison with
experimental data
25Ca trajectories
26Simulation of 100 ions
27Post-Synaptic versus Uniform Distribution
28Number of bonds
With push
no push (PSD)
29Comparison with experimental data
30Fast decay time scale
Majewska et.al JNS2001
31Conclusion
- Spine fast motility based at molecular level
- Ca dynamics Double exponential decay
- Hydrodynamics
- Diffusion
- binding
- Contraction effect push the ion toward the
dendrite. - No contraction majority of ions pump out
- Fast motility may be imply in targeting important
organelles. - Holcman et.al. Biophys, July 2004
32 Ability of spine to compartmentalize Calcium
- Aspiny neuron have micro-structures
- Ca compartmentalizes in dendrite, as in spine
Goldberg et.al 2003, Neuron - Role of dendritic spine?
In Collaboration with E Korkotian, M.Segal
33Spine changes geometrical shape
- Spine highly dynamics change shape constantly
(length of the neck) - Calcium dynamics
- induction of calcium increase
- Head long/short spine equal
- Dendrite CaLongltlt CaShort
34Spine motility, real time
35Change of Spine shape induced by Ca release
- 1,2 Spines change
- 3 Control
36Morphological changes induced by Glutamate release
- Small Concentration?
- increase in spine length
- Large Concentration?
- decrease in spine length
37Calcium dynamics as a function of the spine length
38Calcium dynamics after shrinkage
39Calcium dynamics after elongation
40Consequences
- Calcium extrusion depend on the spine neck length
- Active processes involved
- Pumps
- Stores
- Exchanges
- Conclusion
- Property of spinedynamically changes the length.
- Neck length regulate the number of calcium
reaching the dendrite - How calcium dynamics is related to the neck
length?
41Model calcium extrusion distribution
- Calcium can
- reach the dendrite
- Pumped out
- How to quantify it?
- No quantitative measurements
42Modeling Calcium
- One dimensional model for the neck
- Ca move by diffusion and
- can be absorbed at a pump
Flux through a pump
43Ratio Ca to dendrite/pumped
The flux of the ions arriving at the dendrite is
given by
The total number of ions pumped out is given by
.
The ratio is given by
44Analysis
- In the steady state regime
Asymptotic
Conclusion Predict a sharp transition between
isolate and conducting state
45Transition point
- Critical length
- ? 16.66 and a cutoff length at L1.5 µm
imposes that Np 20. - For Lgt spine is isolated
- for Llt spine is coupled to the dendrite.
46Ratio as a function of spine length
47Distribution of Pumps
- Extrusion Flux1600 (Sabatini et al. 2002),
- the number of pumps that produce a ratio of ?
16.66 should be around 100. - a spine becomes isolated when 1/4 of the pumps
are located on the spine neck.
48Consequences
- spine can become isolated by two different ways
- increase the spine neck length
- increase the number of pumps.
- But two procedures not equivalent, number of
pumps has to increase quadratically in order to
produce a similar effect that would be achieved
by changing linearly the spine length. - L1.5 µm and Np 20, r(1.5) 0.95,
- 10 ions pumped out, 9 arrive to the dendrite
- L1 µm, r(1) 2.33,
- 10 ions pumped out, 23 arrive to the dendrite
49Conclusions
- Spine are highly dynamic
- spine neck length controls the magnitude of
spine/dendrite communication by the presence of
active calcium removal mechanisms - Spine neck can be considered as an active filter
for the passage of calcium - a dendritic spine can become isolated by two
different ways increase the spine neck length,
and the other is to increase the number of pumps - Since a dendrite is a stable structure whereas a
dendritic spine is flexible, having the ability
to change its length, only dendritic spine can
be coupled or/and uncoupled dynamically by
changing both the neck length and the number of
pumps. - Comparing the time needed for a pump to be
functionally active after being synthesized with
the time to change the spine geometry, our
computation suggests that it is more efficient
and fast for the spine head to be
compartmentalized by increasing the length,
rather than adding pumps.