MethodsX (Jun 2024)

Methods for the detection of intracellular calcium in filamentous fungi

  • Megha Rasaily,
  • Serena Ngiimei D,
  • Rahul Kumar Thaosen,
  • Surabhi Gupta,
  • Sangeeta Deka,
  • Ranjan Tamuli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
p. 102570

Abstract

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Calcium (Ca2+), a critical secondary messenger, is also known as the molecule of life and death. The cell responds to a minute change in Ca2+ concentration and tightly maintains Ca2+ homeostasis. Therefore, determining the cell Ca2+ level is critical to understand Ca2+ distribution in the cell and various cell processes. Many techniques have been developed to measure Ca2+ in the cell. We review here different methods used to detect and measure Ca2+ in filamentous fungi. Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent chlortetracycline hydrochloride (CTC), Ca2+-selective microelectrode, Ca2+ isotopes, aequorins, and RGECOs are commonly used to measure the Ca2+ level in filamentous fungi. The use of CTC was one of the earliest methods, developed in 1988, to measure the Ca2+ gradient in the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa. Subsequently, Ca2+-specific microelectrodes were developed later in the 1990s to identify Ca2+ ion flux variations, and to measure Ca2+ concentration. Another method for quantifying Ca2+ is by using radio-labeled Ca2+ as a tracer. The usage of 45Ca to measure Ca2+ in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was reported previously and the same methodology was also used to detect Ca2+ in N. crassa recently. Subsequently, genetically engineered Ca2+ indicators (GECIs) like aequorins and RGECOs have been developed as Ca2+ indicators to detect and visualize Ca2+ inside the cell. In this review, we summarize various methodologies used to detect and measure Ca2+ in filamentous fungi with their advantages and limitations. • Chlortetracycline (CTC) fluorescence assay is used for visualizing Ca2+ level, whereas microelectrodes technique is used to determine Ca2+ flux in the cell. • Radioactive 45Ca is useful for quantification of Ca2+ in the cellular compartments. • Genetically modified calcium indicators (GECIs) are used to study Ca2+ dynamics in the cell.

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