| Literature DB >> 15771784 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The paradigm of "buffering" originated in acid-base physiology, but was subsequently extended to other fields and is now used for a wide and diverse set of phenomena. In the preceding article, we have presented a formal and general approach to the quantitation of buffering action. Here, we use that buffering concept for a systematic treatment of selected classical and other buffering phenomena.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15771784 PMCID: PMC1079954 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4682-2-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Biol Med Model ISSN: 1742-4682 Impact factor: 2.432
Figure 1. The prototype of Langmuir buffering is the buffering of H+ ions in a solution of a weak acid. . Concentrations of free ligand (red), bound ligand (blue), and total ligand in a solution of a weak acid. The relations between the three variables are computed from the equation , where Kd stands for the dissociation constant of the buffer-ligand complex, and [buffer] for total buffer concentration. [buffer] and Kd are assumed to be constant. Plotted for [buffer] = 5 and Kd = 1. . Titration of a "Langmuir buffer" with increasing concentrations of ligand; constant parameters are: [buffer] = 100, Kd = 10, arbitrary concentration units. Characteristic system states shown are the "half-saturation point" of buffer (asterisk), the "equipartitioning point" where half of the added ligand remains free, and the other half is bound by the buffer (open circle), and the "break even point" where the ligand inside the system is half bound, half free (closed circle). Top panel, left: Transfer function τ, i.e., free ligand concentration (ordinate) as a function of total ligand (ordinate). Top panel, right: buffering function β, i.e., bound ligand concentration as a function of total ligand. Middle panel, left: Transfer coefficient t, i.e., the (differential) fraction of added ligand that enters the pool of free ligand. Middle panel, right: Buffering coefficient b, i.e., the (differential) fraction of added ligand that becomes bound to buffer. Bottom panel, left: Transfer ratio T = d(free)/d(bound), i.e., the differential ratio of additional free ligand over additional bound ligand. Bottom panel, right: Buffering ratio B = d(bound)/d(free), i.e., the differential ratio of additional bound ligand over additional free ligand. The parameters b and B provide two complementary measures of buffering strength. . Wireframe surface: The buffering ratio B is shown on the vertical axis; affinity expressed as 1/Kd; concentration of ligand, [ligand], and Kd in arbitrary concentration units. Contours on bottom: Lines connect states of identical buffering strength. For a buffer with a given Kd, buffering strength decreases monotonically with increasing ligand concentration. However, at a fixed ligand concentration, buffering strength as a function of affinity runs through a maximum. . Left hand, linear plot; white lines, states of identical buffering strength; black lines, states of identical fractional buffer saturation. Right, double-logarithmical plot. black lines, states of identical buffering strength; red lines, states of identical fractional buffer saturation. . As shown in Buffering I, the specific angle α for which [α = arccos(T) and α = arctan(B)] can unambiguously represent the buffering parameters t(x), b(x), T(x) and B(x) at a given point on the x axis. Consequently, a curve on the surface of a unit cylinder can represent the buffering behavior for an entire range of x values, yielding a "state portrait". State portraits of several Langmuir buffers are shown. Curves with Roman numerals (I-IV) of different color: effect of decreasing ligand affinity at fixed total concentration. Curves with Arabic numerals (1–4) of different size: effect of increasing total buffer concentration. Less intuitively, yet more practically, the cylinder surface may be "flattened" out and represented in two dimensions (not shown). Blue segment: buffering angle α for curve 4. . Alternative form of a buffering state portrait: each point on the curve is characterized by a "buffering angle α " with the vertical axis (clockwise) and a radius (here plotted logarithmically), which correspond to buffering angle α and total ligand concentration, respectively. Open circles, equipartitioning points, i.e., where t = b and α = 45°.
Figure 3. . The concentration of free Ca++ ions in a small volume element (dx × dy × dz) is changed instantaneously by addition Δe0 further free Ca++ ions (red arrow). The "error" imposed by this acute Ca++ load either persists, or it is reduced over time. Reduction (blue arrows) may occur via Ca++ flux across the boundaries of the volume element (right arrow), or by binding of Ca++ to Ca++ buffers within the volume element (lower arrow); the time-dependent, combined effect of binding and flux is termed "muffling". . From top to bottom: 1, Zero muffling in the absence of both flux and binding; 2, Muffling via flux across its boundaries (e.g. diffusion), without binding to buffers within the volume element; 3, Muffling via binding to buffers inside the volume element, without flux; 4, Muffling due to both binding and flux. Note that peak size and magnitude of muffling action are not correlated. . A measure that reflects both the size and the duration of the error e(t) is the integral (red area). Similarly, a measure that reflects both the size and the duration of the "error reduction" or "muffling" m(t) is given by the integral (blue area). The proportions between ε(t) and μ(t) can be used to define a "muffling coefficient" and "muffling ratio" (see main text of BufferingII). These measures are the time-dependent analogs of the time-independent "buffering coefficient" and "buffering ratio" (Buffering I).