TITLE Submembrane calcium dynamics for N, P/Q, R calcium pool for NAcb cell INDEPENDENT {t FROM 0 TO 1 WITH 1 (ms)} NEURON { SUFFIX cadyn USEION ca READ ica, cai WRITE cai RANGE pump, cainf, taur, drive } UNITS { (molar) = (1/liter) (mM) = (millimolar) (um) = (micron) (mA) = (milliamp) (msM) = (ms mM) } CONSTANT { FARADAY = 96489 (coul) : moles do not appear in units } PARAMETER { drive = 10000 (1) depth = 0.1 (um) : depth of shell cainf = 1e-5 (mM) : gives eca = 108 mV taur = 43 (ms) : kt = 1e-4 (mM/ms) : left over from Destexhe kd = 1e-4 (mM) pump = 0.02 : turn pump up/down } STATE { cai (mM) } INITIAL { cai = cainf } ASSIGNED { ica (mA/cm2) drive_channel (mM/ms) drive_pump (mM/ms) } BREAKPOINT { SOLVE state METHOD derivimplicit } DERIVATIVE state { drive_channel = - drive * ica / (2 * FARADAY * depth) : this part converts the incoming calcium (from channels) into : a corresponding change in internal concentration if (drive_channel <= 0.) { drive_channel = 0. } : cannot pump inward drive_pump = -kt * cai / (cai + kd ) : Michaelis-Menten : this accounts for calcium being pumped back out - M-M : represents mechanism that is rate-limited by low ion conc. : at one end and max pumping rate at high end cai' = ( drive_channel + pump*drive_pump + (cainf-cai)/taur ) : (cainf-cai)/taur represents exponential decay towards cainf : at a time constant of taur from diffusive processe } COMMENT Internal calcium concentration due to calcium currents and pump. Differential equations. This file contains two mechanisms: 1. Simple model of ATPase pump with 3 kinetic constants (Destexhe 1992) Cai + P <-> CaP -> Cao + P (k1,k2,k3) A Michaelis-Menten approximation is assumed, which reduces the complexity of the system to 2 parameters: kt = * k3 -> TIME CONSTANT OF THE PUMP kd = k2/k1 (dissociation constant) -> EQUILIBRIUM CALCIUM VALUE The values of these parameters are chosen assuming a high affinity of the pump to calcium and a low transport capacity (cfr. Blaustein, TINS, 11: 438, 1988, and references therein). For further information about this this mechanism, see Destexhe, A. Babloyantz, A. and Sejnowski, TJ. Ionic mechanisms for intrinsic slow oscillations in thalamic relay neurons. Biophys. J. 65: 1538-1552, 1993. 2. Simple first-order decay or buffering: Cai + B <-> ... which can be written as: dCai/dt = (cainf - Cai) / taur where cainf is the equilibrium intracellular calcium value (usually in the range of 200-300 nM) and taur is the time constant of calcium removal. All variables are range variables Written by Alain Destexhe, Salk Institute, Nov 12, 1992 Citations: Destexhe, A. Babloyantz, A. and Sejnowski, TJ. Ionic mechanisms for intrinsic slow oscillations in thalamic relay neurons. Biophys. J. 65: 1538-1552, 1993. Jackson MB, Redman SJ (2003) Calcium dynamics, buffering, and buffer saturation in the boutons of dentate granule-cell axons in the hilus. J Neurosci 23:1612-1621. ENDCOMMENT