Title: Kim
1Modeling Calcium Concentration
Kim Avrama BlackwellGeorge Mason University
2Importance of Calcium
- Calcium influences channel behaviour, and thereby
spike dynamics - Short term influences on calcium dependent
potassium channels - Long term influences such as potentiation and
depression via kinases - Electrical activity influences calcium
concentration via ICa - Phosphorylation influences calcium concentration
via kinetics of calcium permeable channels
3Feedback Loops of Calcium Dynamics
Calcium
Slow
Kinases
Fast
Ca2
SK, BK channels
Membrane Potential
Potassium, Sodium channels
Synaptic channels, Calcium channels
4Control of Calcium Dynamics
5Control of Calcium Dynamics
- Calcium Sources
- Calcium Currents
- Multiple types of voltage dependence calcium
channels (L, N, P, Q, R, T) - Calcium permeable synaptic channels (NMDA)
- Release from Intracellular Stores (smooth
endoplasmic reticulum) - IP3 Receptor Channel (IP3R)
- Ryanodine Receptor Channel (RyR)
6Control of Calcium Dynamics
- Calcium Sinks
- Pumps
- Smooth Endoplasmic Calcium ATPase (SERCA)
- Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase (PMCA)
- Sodium-Calcium exchanger
- Source or Sink
- Buffers - bind calcium when concentration is
high, releases calcium as concentration decreases - Calmodulin active
- Calbindin - inactive
- Diffusion moves calcium from high concentration
to low concentration regions
7Calcium Currents
- L type (CaL1.x)
- High threshold, Long lasting, no voltage
dependent inactivation (except for CaL1.3) - T type (CaL3.x)
- Low threshold, Transient, prominent voltage
dependent inactivation
8Calcium Currents
N type (Ca2.x) High threshold, moderate voltage
dependent inactivation (Neither long lasting nor
transient) P/Q type (Cal2.x) P type found in
cerebellar Purkinje cells Properties similar to
CaL R type (Cal2.x) Used to be Residual
current Now subunit identified
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10Calcium Current
- Influx due to calcium current is calculated by
- F is Faradays constant
- Software dependent negative sign
- inward current is negative (physiologists
convention) or positive (modelers convention) - Flux has units of moles per unit time, converted
to concentration using rxnpool, Ca_concen,
diffshell, or pool object
11Calcium Release through Receptor Channels
12Calcium Release
- Calcium Release Receptor Channels are modeled as
multi-state molecules - One state is the conducting state
- For IP3 receptor state transitions depend on
calcium concentration and IP3 concentration - For Ryanodine receptor, state transitions depend
on calcium concentration
13Dynamics of Release Channels
- Both IP3R and RyR have two calcium binding sites
- Fast binding to one site, causes channel opening
- Slower binding to other site, causes slow channel
closing
14IP3 Receptor
Similar to RyR but with additional binding site
for IP3 8 state model of DeYoung and Keizer,
1992 Figure from Li and Rinzel, 1994
15Calcium Release
- Release through the channel is proportional to
concentration difference between ER and cytosol - Release depends on fraction of channels in open
state - ?R P Xn (Ca2ER Ca2)
- P is permeability
- X is fraction of channels in open state
- n is number of independent subunits
16Dynamics of Release Channels
- Dynamics similar to sodium channel
- Activation
- IP3 plus calcium produces channel opening
- Channel opening increases calcium concentration
- Higher concentration causes more channels to open
- Positive feed back produces calcium spike
17Dynamics of Release Channels
- Inactivation
- High calcium causes channels to close
(inactivate) - Slow negative feedback
- SERCA pumps calcium back into ER
- Analagous to repolarization
- Calcium concentration returns to basal level
18Li and Rinzel Calcium Release
19Li and Rinzel Calcium Release
20Calcium Extrusion Mechanisms
- Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase (PMCA) pump and
sodium calcium exchanger (NCX) are the primary
mechanism for re-equilibrating calcium in spines
and thin dendrites (Scheuss et al. 2006) - These mechanisms depress with high activity or
calcium concentration - Decay of calcium transient is slower
- Positive feedback elevates calcium in small
compartments
21Calcium ATPase Pumps
- Plasma membrane (PMCA)
- Extrudes calcium to extracellular space
- Binds one calcium ion for each ATP
- Affinity 300 -600 nM
- Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum (SERCA)
- Sequesters calcium in SER
- Binds two calcium ions for each ATP
- Affinity 100 nM
22Pump Equations
- Michaelis-Menten formulation
- Used for SERCA or PMCA pumps
- Implements the equation
- Kcat is the maximal pump capacity
- n is the Hill coefficient number of calcium
molecules bound - KM is the affinity (Half maximal concentration)
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24Sodium Calcium Exchange (NCX)
- Stoichiometry
- 3 sodium exchanged for 1 calcium
- Charge transfer
- Unequal gt electrogenic
- One proton flows in for each transport cycle
- Small current produces small depolarization
- Theoretical capacity 50x greater than PMCA
25Sodium Calcium Exchange (NCX)
Depolarization may reverse pump direction Ion
concentration change may reverse
direction Increase in Naint or decrease in
Naext Increase in internal sodium may explain
activity dependent depression Increase in Caext
or decrease in Caint
26Other formulations in Campbell et al. 1988 J
Physiol., DiFrancesco and Noble 1985 Philos Trans
R Soc Lond B, Weber et al. 2001 J Gen Physiol
27Calcium Buffers
- Calmodulin is a major calcium binding protein
- Binds 4 calcium ions per molecule
- High affinity for target enzymes
- Calcium-Calmodulin Dependent Protein Kinase
(CaMKII, CaMKIV) - Phosphodiesterase (PDE)
- Adenylyl Cyclase (AC)
- Protein Phosphatase 2B (PP2B calcineurin)
- KD1 1.5 uM, KD2 10 uM,
- Recent estimates in Faas, Raghavachari, Lisman,
Mody (2011) Nat Neurosci.
28Calcium Buffers
- Calbindin
- Binds 4 calcium ions per molecule
- Not physiologically active
- 40 ?M in CA1 pyramidal neurons (Muller et al.
2006) - Diffusion coefficient 20 m2/s
- KD 700 nM, kon 2.7 x107 /M-sec
- Parvalbumin
- In fast spiking interneurons
29Buffers
- Effect of buffers modeled using bimolecular
reactions - Ca Buf Ca.Buf
- Diffusible buffers require additional diffusion
equations - Cannot use conserve equations with diffusible
molecules
30Diffusion
- Calcium decay in spines exhibits fast and slow
components (Majewska et al. 2000) - Fast component due to
- Buffered diffusion of calcium from spine to
dendrite, which depends on spine neck geometry - Pumps, which are independent of spine neck
geometry - Slow component matches dendritic calcium decay
- Solely controlled by calcium extrusion mechanisms
in the dendrite
31Radial and Axial Diffusion
Methods in Neuronal Modeling, Koch and
Segev Chapter 6 by DeSchutter and Smolen
32Derivation of Diffusion Equation
- Diffusion in a cylinder
- Derive equation by looking at fluxes in and out
of a slice of width ?x
Boundary Value Problems, Powers
33Derivation of Diffusion Equation
- Flux into left side of slice is q(x,t)
- Flux out of right side is q(x?x,t)
- Fluxes may be negative if flow is in direction
opposite to arrows - Area for diffusional flux is A
Boundary Value Problems, Powers
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39Control of Calcium Dynamics
40- For information on implementing calcium dynamics
in Neuron, see - http//www.neuron.yale.edu/neuron/static/docs/rxd/
index.html
41Calcium Objects
- Ca_concen (genesis), CaConc (moose)
- Simplest implementation of calcium
- Calcium current input converted to ion influx
- B 1 / (z F vol) volume to produce 'reasonable'
calcium concentration - Calcium decays to minimum with single time
constant - moose.doc(CaConc)
- showobject Ca_concen
42Calcium Objects with Diffusion
- Difshell (genesis) and DifShell (Moose)
- concentration shell. Has ionic current flow,
one-dimensional diffusion, first order buffering
and pumps, store influx - Calculates volume and surface areas from diameter
(dia), thick (length) and shape_mode (either slab
or shell) - Combines rxnpool, reaction and diffusion into one
object, thus must define kb, kf, diffusion
constant - To store buffer concentrations, use
- fixbuffer
- Non-diffusible buffer (use with difshell)
- difbuffer
- Diffusible buffer (use with difshell)
43Chemesis Calcium Objects
- Calcium and calcium buffers implemented using
- rxnpool, which can take current influx as input
- conservepool
- Reaction
- mmpump (genesis and chemesis)
- Diffusion (chemesis)
- Uses geometry and concentration of two adjacent
rxnpools to calculate flux between the rxnpools
44Morphology of Model Cell
45Calcium Dynamics in Model Cell
Ca2
46Calcium Buffer Demo
- CalTut.txt explains all tutorials step-by-step
- Cal1-SI.g
- Creates pools of buffer, calcium and calcium
bound buffer - Creates bimolecular reaction for buffering
47Calcium Buffers and Diffusion
- Cal2-SI.g
- Two compartments soma and dendrite
- Calcium binding to buffer is implemented in
function - Diffusion between soma and dendrite
- Cal2difshell.g
- Same system, using difshell and difbuffer
- Computationally more efficient
48Chemesis Release
- CICR implements calcium release states using
Markov kinetic channel formalism
States
Forward rate constants
49Calcium Release Objects
- CICR implements calcium release states using
Markov kinetic channel formalism - Create one element for each state, Rxx
- Parameters (Fields)
- 'Forward' rate constants, ?????
- State vector, e.g. 001 for 1 Ca, 0 IP3 bound
- Calculates fraction of receptors in state
- Inputs calcium, IP3, other states
50Calcium Release Objects
- CICRFLUX implements calcium release
- Messages (inputs) required
- Calcium concentration of ER
- Calcium concentration of Cytosol
- Fraction of channels in open state, X
- Parameters (Fields)
- Permeability, P
- Number of independent subunits, q
- Calculates Ca flux PXq (CaER-CaCyt)
51Calcium Release Demo
- Cal3-SI.g
- Illustrates how to set up calcium release using
cicr object - Requires ER compartment with calcium and buffers
- Calcium concentration increases, and then stays
elevated due to lack of pumps
52Calcium Pump Objects
- mmpump2 used for SERCA or PMCA Pump
- Parameters (fields)
- Affinity (half conc)
- Hill exponent (power)
- maximum rate (max_rate)
- Messages (inputs)
- Concentration
- Calculates flux due to pump
- dC/dt max_rateCapow/(Capowhalf_concpow)
- Different than the mmpump in genesis
- Genesis mmpump has no hill coefficient
53Calcium Release and SERCA
- Cal4.g
- Implements IICR from Cal4.g
- Adds SERCA pump to remove calcium from cytosol
54Voltage Dependent Calcium Channels
- Cal7.g, Cal7difshell.g
- Two concentration compartments, but no calcium
release channels - Requires two voltage compartments
- Uses the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz formulation for
driving potential - Depolarizes the cell with current injection to
activate calcium channel - Cal8.g
- Investigate effect of mesh size on diffusion