Martin D. Bootman,Tony Collins,Claire M. Peppiatt‐Wildman,Larissa S Prothero,Lauren MacKenzie,Patrick De Smet,Marianne Travers,Stephen C. Tovey,Jeong Taeg Seo,Michael J. Berridge,Francesca Ciccolini,Peter Lipp
Calcium (Ca2+) is an almost universal intracellular messenger, controlling a diverse range of cellular processes, such as gene transcription (see Mellström and Naranjo, this issue), muscle contraction and cell proliferation. The ability of a simple ion such as Ca2+to play a pivotal role in cell biology results from the facility that cells have to shape Ca2+signals in the dimensions of space, time and amplitude. To generate the variety of observed Ca2+signals, different cell types employ components selected from a Ca2+signalling ‘toolkit’, which comprizes an array of signalling, homeostatic and sensory mechanisms. By mixing and matching components from the toolkit, cells can obtain Ca2+signals that suit their physiology.