AI Article Synopsis

  • Inadequate levels of calcium and phosphate in vertebrates can lead to bone density loss and increased neuronal activity, prompting the need for high calcium concentrations in bodily fluids.
  • Though high calcium levels can cause unwanted mineralization in soft tissues, this is typically prevented by regulatory proteins present in bodily fluids.
  • This study extends classical nucleation theory to understand how these proteins regulate mineral sedimentation in tissues, developing a mathematical model to identify critical concentrations of proteins necessary for this process.

Article Abstract

In vertebrates, insufficient availability of calcium and inorganic phosphate ions in extracellular fluids leads to loss of bone density and neuronal hyper-excitability. To counteract this problem, calcium ions are usually present at high concentrations throughout bodily fluids-at concentrations exceeding the saturation point. This condition leads to the opposite situation where unwanted mineral sedimentation may occur. Remarkably, ectopic or out-of-place sedimentation into soft tissues is rare, in spite of the thermodynamic driving factors. This fortunate fact is due to the presence of auto-regulatory proteins that are found in abundance in bodily fluids. Yet, many important inflammatory disorders such as atherosclerosis and osteoarthritis are associated with this undesired calcification. Hence, it is important to gain an understanding of the regulatory process and the conditions under which it can go awry. In this manuscript, we extend mean-field continuum classical nucleationtheory of the growth of clusters to encompass surface shielding. We use this formulation to study the regulation of sedimentation of calcium phosphate salts in biological tissues through the mechanism of post-nuclear shielding of nascent mineral particles by binding proteins. We develop a mathematical description of this phenomenon using a countable system of hyperbolic partial differential equations. A critical concentration of regulatory protein is identified as a function of the physical parameters that describe the system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4841804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4946002DOI Listing

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