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The role of passive calcium influx through the cell membrane in galvanotaxis
- Source :
- Cellular & Molecular Biology Letters
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- SP Versita, 2013.
-
Abstract
- Passive calcium influx is one of the theories to explain the cathodal galvanotaxis of cells that utilize the electric field to guide their motion. When exposed to an electric field, the intracellular fluid becomes polarized, leading to positive charge accumulation on the cathodal side and negative charge accumulation on the anodal side. The negative charge on the anodal side attracts extracellular calcium ions, increasing the anodal calcium concentration, which is supposed to decrease the mobile properties of this side. Unfortunately, this model does not capture the Ca2+ dynamics after its presentation to the intracellular fluid. The ions cannot permanently accumulate on the anodal side because that would build a potential drop across the cytoplasm leading to an ionic current, which would carry positive ions (not only Ca2+) from the anodal to the cathodal part through the cytoplasm. If the cytoplasmic conductance for Ca2+ is low enough compared to the membrane conductance, the theory could correctly predict the actual behavior. If the ions move through the cytoplasm at a faster rate, compensating for the passive influx, this theory may fail. This paper contains a discussion of the regimes of validity for this theory.
- Subjects :
- Intracellular Fluid
Short Communication
Intracellular Space
chemistry.chemical_element
Calcium
Biochemistry
Cell membrane
Diffusion
Passive influx
PNP equation
Electricity
Extracellular
medicine
Animals
Electrotaxis
Molecular Biology
Ions
Voltage-dependent calcium channel
Cell Membrane
Conductance
Motility
Biological Transport
Cell Biology
Leak current
Rats
medicine.anatomical_structure
chemistry
Cytoplasm
Biophysics
Calcium Channels
Electrodiffusion
Intracellular
Galvanotaxis
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 16891392 and 14258153
- Volume :
- 18
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cellular & Molecular Biology Letters
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2406d2071236352ff010f64a79d25957