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Reaction–diffusion constraints in living tissue: Effectiveness factors in skeletal muscle design
Authors:S.K. Dasika  S.T. Kinsey  B.R. Locke
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, Florida State University, FAMU‐FSU College of Engineering, 2525 Pottsdamer Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32310;2. telephone: 850‐410‐6165;3. fax: 850‐410‐6150;4. Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina
Abstract:A mathematical model was developed to analyze the effects of intracellular diffusion of O2 and high‐energy phosphate metabolites on aerobic energy metabolism in skeletal muscle. We tested the hypotheses that in a range of muscle fibers from different species (1) aerobic metabolism was not diffusion limited and (2) that fibers had a combination of rate and fiber size that placed them at the brink of substantial diffusion limitation. A simplified chemical reaction rate law for mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation was developed utilizing a published detailed model of isolated mitochondrial function. This rate law was then used as a boundary condition in a reaction–diffusion model that was further simplified using the volume averaging method and solved to determine the rates of oxidative phosphorylation as functions of the volume fraction of mitochondria, the size of the muscle cell, and the amount of oxygen delivered by the capillaries. The effectiveness factor, which is the ratio of reaction rate in the system with finite rates of diffusion to those in the absence of any diffusion limitations, defined the regions where intracellular diffusion of metabolites and O2 may limit aerobic metabolism in both very small, highly oxidative fibers as well as in larger fibers with lower aerobic capacity. Comparison of model analysis with experimental data revealed that none of the fibers was strongly limited by diffusion, as expected. However, while some fibers were near substantial diffusion limitation, most were well within the domain of reaction control of aerobic metabolic rate. This may constitute a safety factor in muscle that provides a level of protection from diffusion constraints under conditions such as hypoxia. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2011; 108:104–115. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:mitochondrial rate law  reaction–  diffusion model  effectiveness factor  skeletal muscle
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