Calcium sparks are brief, highly localized elevations of [Ca2+], which arise spontaneously or can be evoked by depolarization in many types of muscle cells. The Ca2+ is released into the cytoplasm from intracellular stores (the SR) through the SR Ca2+ release channels (the RYR). Since their discovery (in cardiac muscle; Cheng et al. 1993), Ca2+ sparks have attracted substantial attention. The reasons for this are clear: first, Ca2+ sparks almost certainly serve as “building blocks” for larger cellular Ca2+ signals, such as Ca2+ waves or the Ca2+ transients that trigger muscle contraction. In some cases, modulation of the whole-cell Ca2+ transient occurs by variation in the number of building blocks. Second, the highly localized nature of the changes in [Ca...

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