What they found

In Jurkat T cells, Ca²⁺ oscillations (rather than sustained Ca²⁺ elevations) activate NF-κB, NF-AT, and Oct/OAP transcription factors with high efficiency and specificity. The key finding: different transcription factors have different threshold frequencies — NF-AT is activated at low frequencies; NF-κB requires higher frequency. CaMKII autophosphorylation accumulates preferentially with high-frequency oscillations; calcineurin (which dephosphorylates and activates NF-AT) is activated by lower-frequency sustained signals. This establishes the concept of frequency decoding of Ca²⁺ signals.

Numbers that matter

  • Optimal oscillation frequency for NF-κB: ~0.2–0.5 Hz
  • Calcineurin (NF-AT pathway) activated by low-frequency/sustained Ca²⁺: EC50 ~ 200–500 nM
  • CaMKII switches to sustained activity at higher frequencies due to autophosphorylation memory
  • Rate constants k_on_CaN = 0.3/s and k_off_CaN = 0.05/s in the h05 model are not directly from this paper — they are fitted values consistent with the conceptual framework

Fit to h05

The RBM24 ODE Phase 1 model is built on the Dolmetsch frequency-decoding concept. Dolmetsch 1998 confirms the biological plausibility of the CaMKII:CaN ratio as a Ca²⁺ frequency readout. However, the specific rate constants used in the model are estimates, not direct measurements from this paper. The paper does not study cochlear hair cells.

Connections