Contents |
Measuring Ca2+ in living tissue
The total amount of Ca2+ present in a tissue may be measured using atomic absorption spectrometry, in which the tissue is vapourized and combusted. To measure Ca2+ in vivo, a range of fluorescent dyes may be used. These dyes are based on Ca2+-binding molecules such as BAPTA and so care is required in their use, because they may actually buffer the Ca2+ changes which they are used to measure.
Organs and tissues
Different tissues contain Ca in different concentrations. In vertebrates Ca (mostly calcium phosphate and some calcium sulfate) is the most important (and specific) element of bone and calcified cartilage.
Some invertebrates use calcium compounds for building their exoskeleton (shells and carapaces) or endoskeleton (echinoderm plates and poriferan calcareous spicules). Many protists also make use of calcium.
There are also some plants that accumulate Ca in their tissues, thus making them more firm. Calcium is stored as Ca-oxalate crystals in plastids.
Cell biology
In eukaryotes, Ca2+ ions are one of the most widespread second messengers used in signal transduction. They make their entrance into the cytoplasm either from outside the cell through the cell membrane via calcium channels (such as Ca-binding proteins), or from some internal calcium storages.
Ca2+ entering the cell plasma causes the specific action of the cell, whatever this action is: secretory cells release vesicles with their secretion, muscle cells contract, synapses release synaptic vesicles and go into processes of synaptic plasticity, etc.
Calcium's function in muscle contraction was found as early as 1882 by Ringer and led the way for further investigations to reveal its role as a messenger about a century later. Because its action is interconnected with cAMP, they are called synarchic messengers. Calcium can bind to several different calcium-modulated proteins such as troponin-C (the first one to be identified) or calmodulin. The ions are stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of muscle cells.
The same Ca2+ ions can, however, bring damage to cells if there are too many of them (for example in the case of excitotoxicity, or overexcitation of neural circuits, which can occur after brain trauma or stroke). Excesses of calcium within a cell may damage it or even cause it to undergo apoptosis. One cause of hypercalcemia is hyperparathyroidism.
Calcium in plants
Structural roles
Ca2+ ions are an essential component of plant cell walls and cell membranes, and are used as cations to balance organic anions in the plant vacuole.[1] The Ca2+ concentration of the vacuole may reach millimolar levels. The most striking use of Ca2+ ions as a structural element in plants occurs in the marine coccolithophores, which use Ca2+ to form the calcium carbonate plates with which they are covered.
Cell signalling
Ca2+ ions are usually kept at nanomolar levels in the cytosol of plant cells, and act in a number of signal transduction pathways.
Food sources
The USDA web site has a very complete table of calcium content (in mg) of common foods per common measures (link below).
Calcium amount in foods, 100g:
- vaccine = 116 mg
human milk = 33 mg
milk powder = 909 mg
parmesan (cheese) = 1140 mg
ricotta (skimmed milk cheese) = 90 mg
egg, 1 = 54 mg
molasses = 273 mg
brown sugar = 85 mg
white sugar = 0 mg
honey = 5 mg
flour = 41 mg
wheat germ = 72 mg
beef = 12 mg
horse meat = 10 mg
cod = 11 mg
trout = 19 mg
hazels = 250 mg
almonds = 234 mg
nuts = 99 mg
lentils = 79 mg
Rice, white, long-grain, parboiled, enriched, cooked = 19 mg
References
- ^ White, Philip J., Martin R. Broadley (2003). "Calcium in Plants". Annals of Botany 92 (4): 487–511. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
External links
- USDA national nutritional database, Calcium content of selected foods
- http://www.parrottalk.com/calcium.html Calcium Rich Vegetables
- http://www.nof.org/prevention/calcium.htm Calcium and vitamin D.