Palus M, Schöfl C, von zur Mühlen A, Brabant G, Prank K
Institute of Computer Science, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic.
Pac Symp Biocomput. 1998:645-56.
Calcium (Ca2+) is an ubiquitous intracellular messenger which regulates cellular processes, such as secretion, contraction, and cell proliferation. A variety of cell types respond to hormonal stimuli with periodic oscillations of the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) which can be modulated in their frequency in a dose-dependent manner. The period of these well-studied oscillations varies normally between 30 sec and a couple of minutes. Here we study [Ca2+]i oscillations in clonal beta cells (hamster insulin secreting cells, HIT) under pharmacological stimulation. Besides the well-known high-amplitude low frequency oscillations we try to analyze for the first time low-amplitude high frequency oscillations of [Ca2+]i under pharmacological stimulation which have not been explored in experimental approaches to date. Using coarse-grained entropy rates computed from information-theoretic functionals we demonstrate differences in temporal complexity of the fast low-amplitude [Ca2+]i dynamics corresponding to different phases of pharmacological stimulation which are additional to the well-known dose-dependent pattern of low-frequency high amplitude [Ca2+]i dynamics.