Ca²+ Gradient & Properties - The Tiny Titan
concentration gradient: high extracellularly and within ER/SR, very low in cytosol)
- Steep Electrochemical Gradient:
- Cytosolic [Ca^{2+}]_{i} \approx \textbf{100 nM} (resting)
- Extracellular [Ca^{2+}]_{o} \approx \textbf{1-2 mM} (~10,000x higher)
- ER/SR lumen [Ca^{2+}]_{ER/SR} \approx \textbf{0.1-1 mM} (~1,000x higher)
- Maintained by: Ca²⁺ pumps (PMCA, SERCA) & Na⁺/Ca²⁺ exchanger (NCX).
- Signaling Titan:
- Versatile intracellular second messenger.
- Rapid signaling due to large influx down gradient.
- Binds Ca²⁺-binding proteins (e.g., calmodulin, troponin C) for diverse cellular responses.
⭐ The enormous concentration gradient for Ca²⁺ across membranes is key to its role as a rapid and versatile signaling ion.
$Ca^{2+}$ Entry Mechanisms - Opening the Gates
- Voltage-Gated $Ca^{2+}$ Channels (VGCCs): Open upon membrane depolarization.
- Ligand-Gated $Ca^{2+}$ Channels (LGCCs): Activated by ligand binding (e.g., NMDA receptors).
- Store-Operated $Ca^{2+}$ Entry (SOCE):
- ER $Ca^{2+}$ depletion sensed by STIM proteins.
- STIM activates ORAI channels in plasma membrane for $Ca^{2+}$ influx.
- Receptors on ER/SR (Store Release):
- IP₃ Receptors (IP₃Rs): Activated by IP₃; release $Ca^{2+}$ from ER.
- Ryanodine Receptors (RyRs): Activated by $Ca^{2+}$ (CICR) or depolarization (skeletal muscle); release $Ca^{2+}$ from SR/ER.
⭐ Store-Operated $Ca^{2+}$ Entry (SOCE) is a critical mechanism for replenishing ER $Ca^{2+}$ stores and sustaining $Ca^{2+}$ signals.
Ca²+ Removal Mechanisms - Keeping it Low
- Maintains low cytosolic [Ca²⁺] (resting ~100 nM) vs. high extracellular/ER (mM).
- ATP-Dependent Pumps (Primary Active Transport):
- PMCA (Plasma Membrane Ca²⁺-ATPase): Extrudes Ca²⁺ from cell.
- SERCA (Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca²⁺-ATPase): Sequesters Ca²⁺ into ER/SR.
- Ion Exchangers (Secondary Active Transport):
- NCX (Na⁺/Ca²⁺ Exchanger): Primarily 3 Na⁺ in for 1 Ca²⁺ out.
- Organellar Sequestration:
- Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ Uniporter (MCU): Uptake into mitochondria, especially at high [Ca²⁺]c.
, Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA), Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX), Mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter (MCU))
⭐ SERCA pumps are P-type ATPases responsible for sequestering Ca²+ into the ER/SR, crucial for terminating Ca²+ signals and muscle relaxation (e.g., Lusitropy in heart).
Ca²+ Sensors & Effectors - The Signal Spreaders
with EF hands binding Ca²+, and its interaction with CaMKII or Calcineurin)
- Ca²⁺ Sensors: Intracellular proteins binding Ca²⁺, initiating signals.
- Calmodulin (CaM): Key sensor; four EF-hand motifs bind Ca²⁺.
- Binding → CaM conformational change → activates target effectors.
- Ca²⁺ Effectors: Enzymes/proteins activated by Ca²⁺-CaM complex.
- Examples:
- CaM Kinases (e.g., CaMKII): Phosphorylate downstream proteins.
- Calcineurin (PP2B): Ca²⁺/CaM-dependent phosphatase (T-cell activation).
- Protein Kinase C (PKC): Certain isoforms Ca²⁺/DAG activated.
- Examples:
- Cellular Responses: Muscle contraction, neurotransmitter release, gene expression changes, apoptosis.
⭐ Calmodulin is a primary Ca²⁺ sensor with four EF-hand motifs, mediating a vast array of Ca²⁺-dependent cellular processes.
Ca²+ Spatiotemporal Dynamics - Waves & Woes
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High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Ca²⁺ is a vital intracellular second messenger regulating processes like muscle contraction and neurotransmitter release.
- Main Ca²⁺ stores: sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum (SR/ER) and extracellular fluid.
- Key release channels from SR/ER: IP₃ receptors and ryanodine receptors (RyRs).
- Calmodulin is a primary Ca²⁺ sensor protein, activating downstream enzymes.
- SERCA and PMCA pumps actively remove cytosolic Ca²⁺, maintaining low resting concentrations.
- Calcium-Induced Calcium Release (CICR) is essential for cardiac muscle excitation-contraction coupling.
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