490 research outputs found
Are physiological oscillations 'physiological'?
Despite widespread and striking examples of physiological oscillations, their
functional role is often unclear. Even glycolysis, the paradigm example of
oscillatory biochemistry, has seen questions about its oscillatory function.
Here, we take a systems approach to summarize evidence that oscillations play
critical physiological roles. Oscillatory behavior enables systems to avoid
desensitization, to avoid chronically high and therefore toxic levels of
chemicals, and to become more resistant to noise. Oscillation also enables
complex physiological systems to reconcile incompatible conditions such as
oxidation and reduction, by cycling between them, and to synchronize the
oscillations of many small units into one large effect. In pancreatic beta
cells, glycolytic oscillations are in synchrony with calcium and mitochondrial
oscillations to drive pulsatile insulin release, which is pivotal for the liver
to regulate blood glucose dynamics. In addition, oscillation can keep
biological time, essential for embryonic development in promoting cell
diversity and pattern formation. The functional importance of oscillatory
processes requires a rethinking of the traditional doctrine of homeostasis,
holding that physiological quantities are maintained at constant equilibrium
values, a view that has largely failed us in the clinic. A more dynamic
approach will enable us to view health and disease through a new light and
initiate a paradigm shift in treating diseases, including depression and
cancer. This modern synthesis also takes a deeper look into the mechanisms that
create, sustain and abolish oscillatory processes, which requires the language
of nonlinear dynamics, well beyond the linearization techniques of equilibrium
control theory
Front motion and localized states in an asymmetric bistable activator-inhibitor system with saturation
We study the spatiotemporal properties of coherent states (peaks, holes, and
fronts) in a bistable activator-inhibitor system that exhibits biochemical
saturated autocatalysis, and in which fronts do not preserve spatial parity
symmetry. Using the Gierer-Meinhardt prototype model, we find the conditions in
which two distinct pinning regions are formed. The first pinning type is known
in the context of variational systems while the second is structurally
different due to the presence of a heteroclinic bifurcation between two uniform
states. The bifurcation also separates the parameter regions of
counterpropagating fronts, leading in turn to the growth or contraction of
activator domains. These phenomena expand the range of pattern formation theory
and its biomedical applications: activator domain retraction suggests potential
therapeutic strategies for patterned pathologies, such as cardiovascular
calcification.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Spark-induced Sparks as a Mechanism of Intracellular Calcium Alternans in Cardiac Myocytes
Rationale: Intracellular calcium (Ca) alternans has been widely studied in cardiac myocytes and tissue, yet the underlying mechanism remains controversial.
Objective: In this study, we used computational modeling and simulation to study how randomly occurring Ca sparks interact collectively to result in whole-cell Ca alternans.
Methods and Results: We developed a spatially-distributed intracellular Ca cycling model in which Ca release units (CRUs) are locally coupled by Ca diffusion throughout the myoplasm and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) network. Ca sparks occur randomly in the CRU network when periodically paced with a clamped voltage waveform, but Ca alternans develops as the pacing speeds up. Combining computational simulation with theoretical analysis, we show that Ca alternans emerges as a collective behavior of Ca sparks, determined by three critical properties of the CRU network from which Ca sparks arise: randomness (of Ca spark activation), refractoriness (of a CRU after a Ca spark), and recruitment (Ca sparks inducing Ca sparks in adjacent CRUs). We also show that the steep nonlinear relationship between fractional SR Ca release and SR Ca load arises naturally as a collective behavior of Ca sparks, and Ca alternans can occur even when SR Ca is held constant.
Conclusions: We present a general theory for the mechanisms of intracellular Ca alternans, which mechanistically links Ca sparks to whole-cell Ca alternans, and is applicable to Ca alternans in both physiological and pathophysiological conditions
Period-doubling Bifurcation in an Array of Coupled Stochastically-excitable Elements Subjected to Global Periodic Forcing
The collective behaviors of coupled, stochastically-excitable elements subjected to global periodic forcing are investigated numerically and analytically. We show that the whole system undergoes a period-doubling bifurcation as the driving period decreases, while the individual elements still exhibit random excitations. Using a mean-field representation, we show that this macroscopic bifurcation behavior is caused by interactions between the random excitation, the refractory period, and recruitment (spatial cooperativity) of the excitable elements
Acceleration of cardiac tissue simulation with graphic processing units
In this technical note we show the promise of using graphic processing units (GPUs) to accelerate simulations of electrical wave propagation in cardiac tissue, one of the more demanding computational problems in cardiology. We have found that the computational speed of two-dimensional (2D) tissue simulations with a single commercially available GPU is about 30 times faster than with a single 2.0Â GHz Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Opteron processor. We have also simulated wave conduction in the three-dimensional (3D) anatomic heart with GPUs where we found the computational speed with a single GPU is 1.6 times slower than with a 32-central processing unit (CPU) Opteron cluster. However, a cluster with two or four GPUs is faster than the CPU-based cluster. These results demonstrate that a commodity personal computer is able to perform a whole heart simulation of electrical wave conduction within times that enable the investigators to interact more easily with their simulations
"I’ve got a sheep with three legs if anybody wants it?’" - re-visioning the rural economy
This paper reports on a study of 4CG, a cooperative enterprise located in rural Wales. 4CG operates for the good of the local economy and seeks to diversify its commercial portfolio through the creation of an online shop retailing goods and services from local suppliers. The paper compliments prior field studies focusing on rural enterprise and the challenges posed by this category of business for IT support. The current study is motivated by 4CG’s interest in setting up a local online shop and explicates the organisational issues that this venture turns upon and elaborates for broader sustainability agendas
Perspective: a dynamics-based classification of ventricular arrhythmias
Despite key advances in the clinical management of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias, culminating with the development of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and catheter ablation techniques, pharmacologic/biologic therapeutics have lagged behind. The fundamental issue is that biological targets are molecular factors. Diseases, however, represent emergent properties at the scale of the organism that result from dynamic interactions between multiple constantly changing molecular factors. For a pharmacologic/biologic therapy to be effective, it must target the dynamic processes that underlie the disease. Here we propose a classification of ventricular arrhythmias that is based on our current understanding of the dynamics occurring at the subcellular, cellular, tissue and organism scales, which cause arrhythmias by simultaneously generating arrhythmia triggers and exacerbating tissue vulnerability. The goal is to create a framework that systematically links these key dynamic factors together with fixed factors (structural and electrophysiological heterogeneity) synergistically promoting electrical dispersion and increased arrhythmia risk to molecular factors that can serve as biological targets. We classify ventricular arrhythmias into three primary dynamic categories related generally to unstable Ca cycling, reduced repolarization, and excess repolarization, respectively. The clinical syndromes, arrhythmia mechanisms, dynamic factors and what is known about their molecular counterparts are discussed. Based on this framework, we propose a computational-experimental strategy for exploring the links between molecular factors, fixed factors and dynamic factors that underlie life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias. The ultimate objective is to facilitate drug development by creating an in silico platform to evaluate and predict comprehensively how molecular interventions affect not only a single targeted arrhythmia, but all primary arrhythmia dynamics categories as well as normal cardiac excitation-contraction coupling
Searching for music: understanding the discovery, acquisition, processing and organization of music in a domestic setting for design
This series of studies make it clear that a wide range of both physical and digital resources are involved in domestic music consumption. The selection of digital resources is particularly evident, and it can be observed that domestic music consumption is a fragmented business, taking advantage of many different "channels'' for getting, using and preparing music. While there are not a series of common channels, each home displayed a variety of methods in respect to using metadata in multiple different modalities: regardless, the activities involved in getting, using and preparing music cohere through a noticeable, emergent set of workflows. We find that not only does metadata support searching, as one might expect, but also it pervades all parts of the workflow and is used in real-time as a reflexive artifact and in terms of its future perceived/prescribed use. The findings of the research raise a series of possibilities and issues that form the basis for understanding and designing for metadata use
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