Journal article
Mathematical modeling of intracellular osmolarity and cell volume stabilization: The Donnan effect and ion transport
The Journal of general physiology, Vol.156(8), e202413554
08/05/2024
DOI: 10.1085/jgp.202413554
PMCID: PMC11247275
PMID: 38995224
Abstract
The presence of impermeant molecules within a cell can lead to an increase in cell volume through the influx of water driven by osmosis. This phenomenon is known as the Donnan (or Gibbs-Donnan) effect. Animal cells actively transport ions to counteract the Donnan effect and regulate their volume, actively pumping Na+ out and K+ into their cytosol using the Na+/K+ ATPase (NKA) pump. The pump-leak equations (PLEs) are a system of algebraic-differential equations to model the membrane potential, ion (Na+, K+, and Cl-), and water flux across the cell membrane, which provide insight into how the combination of passive ions fluxes and active transport contribute to stabilizing cell volume. Our broad objective is to provide analytical insight into the PLEs through three lines of investigation: (1) we show that the provision of impermeant extracellular molecules can stabilize the volume of a passive cell; (2) we demonstrate that the mathematical form of the NKA pump is not as important as the stoichiometry for cell stabilization; and (3) we investigate the interaction between the NKA pump and cation-chloride co-transporters (CCCs) on cell stabilization, showing that NCC can destabilize a cell while NKCC and KCC can stabilize it. We incorporate extracellular impermeant molecules, NKA pump, and CCCs into the PLEs and derive the exact formula for the steady states in terms of all the parameters. This analytical expression enables us to easily explore the effect of each of the system parameters on the existence and stability of the steady states.The presence of impermeant molecules within a cell can lead to an increase in cell volume through the influx of water driven by osmosis. This phenomenon is known as the Donnan (or Gibbs-Donnan) effect. Animal cells actively transport ions to counteract the Donnan effect and regulate their volume, actively pumping Na+ out and K+ into their cytosol using the Na+/K+ ATPase (NKA) pump. The pump-leak equations (PLEs) are a system of algebraic-differential equations to model the membrane potential, ion (Na+, K+, and Cl-), and water flux across the cell membrane, which provide insight into how the combination of passive ions fluxes and active transport contribute to stabilizing cell volume. Our broad objective is to provide analytical insight into the PLEs through three lines of investigation: (1) we show that the provision of impermeant extracellular molecules can stabilize the volume of a passive cell; (2) we demonstrate that the mathematical form of the NKA pump is not as important as the stoichiometry for cell stabilization; and (3) we investigate the interaction between the NKA pump and cation-chloride co-transporters (CCCs) on cell stabilization, showing that NCC can destabilize a cell while NKCC and KCC can stabilize it. We incorporate extracellular impermeant molecules, NKA pump, and CCCs into the PLEs and derive the exact formula for the steady states in terms of all the parameters. This analytical expression enables us to easily explore the effect of each of the system parameters on the existence and stability of the steady states.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Mathematical modeling of intracellular osmolarity and cell volume stabilization: The Donnan effect and ion transport
- Creators
- Zahra Aminzare - University of IowaAlan R Kay - University of Iowa
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- The Journal of general physiology, Vol.156(8), e202413554
- DOI
- 10.1085/jgp.202413554
- PMID
- 38995224
- PMCID
- PMC11247275
- NLM abbreviation
- J Gen Physiol
- ISSN
- 1540-7748
- eISSN
- 1540-7748
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 08/05/2024
- Academic Unit
- Iowa Neuroscience Institute; Biology; Mathematics
- Record Identifier
- 9984656633502771
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