Does Ca2+ reach millimolar concentrations after single photon absorption in Drosophila photoreceptor microvilli?

Citation
M. Postma et al., Does Ca2+ reach millimolar concentrations after single photon absorption in Drosophila photoreceptor microvilli?, BIOPHYS J, 77(4), 1999, pp. 1811-1823
Citations number
72
Categorie Soggetti
Biochemistry & Biophysics
Journal title
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
00063495 → ACNP
Volume
77
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1811 - 1823
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3495(199910)77:4<1811:DCRMCA>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
The quantum bump, the elementary event of fly phototransduction induced by the absorption of a single photon, is a small, transient current due to the opening of cation-channels permeable to Ca2+. These channels are located i n small, tube-like protrusions of the cell membrane, the microvilli. Using a modeling approach, we calculate the changes of free Ca2+ concentration in side the microvilli, taking into account influx and diffusion of Ca2+. Inde pendent of permeability ratios and Ca2+ buffering, we find that the free Ca 2+ concentrations rise to millimolar values, as long as we assume that all activated channels are located in a single microvillus. When we assume that as much as 25 microvilli participate in a single bump, the free Ca2+ conce ntration still reaches values higher than 80 mu M. These very high concentr ations show that the microvilli of fly photoreceptors are unique structures in which the Ca2+ signaling is even more extreme than in calcium concentra tion microdomains very close to Ca2+ channels.