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Sarcolemmal calcium binding sites in heart: II. Mathematical model for diffusion of calcium released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the diadic region

✍ Scribed by Arthur Peskoff; Jan A. Posit; Glenn A. Langer


Publisher
Springer
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
915 KB
Volume
129
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-2631

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✦ Synopsis


We present a model for predicting the temporal and spatial dependence of [Ca] in the cardiac subsarcolemmal diadic region (cleft), following Ca release from the "feet" of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. This region is modeled as a disc 10 nm thick, 430 nm in radius, with or without Ca binding sites and open at its periphery to the cytosol. [Ca] is computed for three diffusion coefficients (100, 20 and 4% of aqueous diffusion), following release of a 20-msec square pulse sufficient to produce 50% maximal contractile force, or repetitive release (400/min) of such pulses. Numerical solutions are obtained for the general diffusion/binding problem and analytic solutions for the case of no binding sites. For the middle value of diffusion coefficient, and in the absence of binding sites, [Ca] rises to approximately 1.5 mM in 20-msec and then falls to approximately 0.1 microM in less than 3 msec. Adding binding sites reduces peak [Ca] to approximately 0.6 mM but prolongs its decline, requiring approximately 200 msec to reach 20 microM. For repetitive release [Ca] is greater than 100 microM for roughly half of each cycle. Two major implications of the predicted [Ca] are: (i) The effect of Ca binding sites on [Ca] will cause Ca efflux from the cleft via the Na-Ca exchanger (Km(Ca) approximately 20 microM) to continue at a significant level for greater than 200 msec. (ii) The time constant for inactivation of release from the "feet" must be much greater than for activation if Ca-induced Ca release is to continue for greater than 1-2 msec.