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Human T cells in silico: Modelling dynamic intracellular calcium and its influence on cellular electrophysiology.

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A network of ion currents influences basic cellular T cell functions. After T cell receptor activation, changes in highly regulated calcium levels play a central role in triggering effector functions… Click to show full abstract

A network of ion currents influences basic cellular T cell functions. After T cell receptor activation, changes in highly regulated calcium levels play a central role in triggering effector functions and cell differentiation. A dysregulation of these processes might be involved in the pathogenesis of several diseases. We present a mathematical model based on the NEURON simulation environment that computes dynamic calcium levels in combination with the current output of diverse ion channels (KV1.3, KCa3.1, K2P channels (TASK1-3, TRESK), VRAC, TRPM7, CRAC). In line with experimental data, the simulation shows a strong increase in intracellular calcium after T cell receptor stimulation before reaching a new, elevated calcium plateau in the T cell's activated state. Deactivation of single ion channel modules, mimicking the application of channel blockers, reveals that two types of potassium channels are the main regulators of intracellular calcium level: calcium-dependent potassium (KCa3.1) and two-pore-domain potassium (K2P) channels.

Keywords: intracellular calcium; modelling dynamic; silico modelling; cells silico; calcium; human cells

Journal Title: Journal of immunological methods
Year Published: 2018

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