The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.

Calcium ions (Ca2+) are important mediators of a great variety of cellular activities e.g. in response to an agonist activation of a receptor. The magnitude of a cellular response is often encoded by frequency modulation of Ca2+ oscillations and correlated with the stimulation intensity. The stimula...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michaël Dougoud, Laura Vinckenbosch, Christian Mazza, Beat Schwaller, László Pecze
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226819?pdf=render
id doaj-5c59d4b51a4c481dbe50bd3f0a7c87ca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5c59d4b51a4c481dbe50bd3f0a7c87ca2020-11-25T01:44:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582016-12-011212e100529510.1371/journal.pcbi.1005295The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.Michaël DougoudLaura VinckenboschChristian MazzaBeat SchwallerLászló PeczeCalcium ions (Ca2+) are important mediators of a great variety of cellular activities e.g. in response to an agonist activation of a receptor. The magnitude of a cellular response is often encoded by frequency modulation of Ca2+ oscillations and correlated with the stimulation intensity. The stimulation intensity highly depends on the sensitivity of a cell to a certain agonist. In some cases, it is essential that neighboring cells produce a similar and synchronized response to an agonist despite their different sensitivity. In order to decipher the presumed function of Ca2+ waves spreading among connecting cells, a mathematical model was developed. This model allows to numerically modifying the connectivity probability between neighboring cells, the permeability of gap junctions and the individual sensitivity of cells to an agonist. Here, we show numerically that strong gap junctional coupling between neighbors ensures an equilibrated response to agonist stimulation via formation of Ca2+ phase waves, i.e. a less sensitive neighbor will produce the same or similar Ca2+ signal as its highly sensitive neighbor. The most sensitive cells within an ensemble are the wave initiator cells. The Ca2+ wave in the cytoplasm is driven by a sensitization wave front in the endoplasmic reticulum. The wave velocity is proportional to the cellular sensitivity and to the strength of the coupling. The waves can form different patterns including circular rings and spirals. The observed pattern depends on the strength of noise, gap junctional permeability and the connectivity probability between neighboring cells. Our simulations reveal that one highly sensitive region gradually takes the lead within the entire noisy system by generating directed circular phase waves originating from this region.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226819?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michaël Dougoud
Laura Vinckenbosch
Christian Mazza
Beat Schwaller
László Pecze
spellingShingle Michaël Dougoud
Laura Vinckenbosch
Christian Mazza
Beat Schwaller
László Pecze
The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Michaël Dougoud
Laura Vinckenbosch
Christian Mazza
Beat Schwaller
László Pecze
author_sort Michaël Dougoud
title The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
title_short The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
title_full The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
title_fullStr The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Gap Junctional Coupling on the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ca2+ Signals and the Harmonization of Ca2+-Related Cellular Responses.
title_sort effect of gap junctional coupling on the spatiotemporal patterns of ca2+ signals and the harmonization of ca2+-related cellular responses.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Calcium ions (Ca2+) are important mediators of a great variety of cellular activities e.g. in response to an agonist activation of a receptor. The magnitude of a cellular response is often encoded by frequency modulation of Ca2+ oscillations and correlated with the stimulation intensity. The stimulation intensity highly depends on the sensitivity of a cell to a certain agonist. In some cases, it is essential that neighboring cells produce a similar and synchronized response to an agonist despite their different sensitivity. In order to decipher the presumed function of Ca2+ waves spreading among connecting cells, a mathematical model was developed. This model allows to numerically modifying the connectivity probability between neighboring cells, the permeability of gap junctions and the individual sensitivity of cells to an agonist. Here, we show numerically that strong gap junctional coupling between neighbors ensures an equilibrated response to agonist stimulation via formation of Ca2+ phase waves, i.e. a less sensitive neighbor will produce the same or similar Ca2+ signal as its highly sensitive neighbor. The most sensitive cells within an ensemble are the wave initiator cells. The Ca2+ wave in the cytoplasm is driven by a sensitization wave front in the endoplasmic reticulum. The wave velocity is proportional to the cellular sensitivity and to the strength of the coupling. The waves can form different patterns including circular rings and spirals. The observed pattern depends on the strength of noise, gap junctional permeability and the connectivity probability between neighboring cells. Our simulations reveal that one highly sensitive region gradually takes the lead within the entire noisy system by generating directed circular phase waves originating from this region.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226819?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeldougoud theeffectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT lauravinckenbosch theeffectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT christianmazza theeffectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT beatschwaller theeffectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT laszlopecze theeffectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT michaeldougoud effectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT lauravinckenbosch effectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT christianmazza effectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT beatschwaller effectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
AT laszlopecze effectofgapjunctionalcouplingonthespatiotemporalpatternsofca2signalsandtheharmonizationofca2relatedcellularresponses
_version_ 1725027256636538880