Cc. Fink et al., Determination of time-dependent inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate concentrations during calcium release in a smooth muscle cell, BIOPHYS J, 77(1), 1999, pp. 617-628
The level of [InsP(3)](oyt) required for calcium release in A7r5 cells, a s
mooth muscle cell line, was determined by a new set of procedures using qua
ntitative confocal microscopy to measure release of InsP(3) from cells micr
oinjected with caged InsP(3). From these experiments, the [InsP(3)](cyt) re
quired to evoke a half-maximal calcium response is 100 nM. Experiments with
caged glycerophosphoryl-myo-inositol 4,5-bisphosphate (GPIP(2)), a slowly
metabolized analogue of InsP(3), gave a much slower recovery and a half-max
imal response of an order of magnitude greater than InsP(3). Experimental d
ata and highly constrained variables were used to construct a mathematical
model of the InsP(3)-dependent [Ca2+](cyt) changes; the resulting simulatio
ns show high fidelity to experiment. Among the elements considered in const
ructing this model were the mechanism of the InsP(3)-receptor, InsP(3) degr
adation, calcium buffering in the cytosol, and refilling of the ER stores v
ia sarcoplasmic endoplasmic reticulum ATPase (SERCA) pumps. The model predi
cts a time constant of 0.8 s for InsP(3) degradation and 13 s for GPIP(2).
InsP(3) degradation was found to be a prerequisite for [Ca2+](cyt) recovery
to baseline levels and is therefore critical to the pattern of the overall
[Ca2+](cyt) signal. Analysis of the features of this model provides insigh
ts into the individual factors controlling the amplitude and shape of the I
nsP(3)-mediated calcium signal.