Nonlinear gap junctions enable long-distance propagation of pulsating calcium waves in astrocyte networks
Mati Goldberg, Maurizio De Pitt\`a, Vladislav Volman, Hugues, Berry, Eshel Ben-Jacob

TL;DR
This study models how nonlinear gap junctions enable long-distance calcium wave propagation in astrocyte networks, revealing the importance of internal calcium dynamics and nonlinear coupling for effective intercellular communication.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model demonstrating that nonlinear gap junctions and pulsating calcium dynamics are crucial for long-distance wave propagation in astrocyte networks.
Findings
Long-distance propagation requires nonlinear gap junction coupling.
Pulsating calcium oscillations facilitate wave propagation.
Heterogeneous properties support complex spatiotemporal dynamics.
Abstract
A new paradigm has recently emerged in brain science whereby communications between glial cells and neuron-glia interactions should be considered together with neurons and their networks to understand higher brain functions. In particular, astrocytes, the main type of glial cells in the cortex, have been shown to communicate with neurons and with each other. They are thought to form a gap-junction-coupled syncytium supporting cell-cell communication via propagating Ca2+ waves. An identified mode of propagation is based on cytoplasm-to-cytoplasm transport of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) through gap junctions that locally trigger Ca2+ pulses via IP3-dependent Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release. It is, however, currently unknown whether this intracellular route is able to support the propagation of long-distance regenerative Ca2+ waves or is restricted to short-distance signaling. Furthermore, the…
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