Title: | Determinants of cell-to-cell variability in protein kinase signaling |
Author(s): | Jeschke M; Baumgartner S; Legewie S; |
Address: | "Institute of Molecular Biology (IMB), Mainz, Germany" |
DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003357 |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1553-7358 (Electronic) 1553-734X (Print) 1553-734X (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Cells reliably sense environmental changes despite internal and external fluctuations, but the mechanisms underlying robustness remain unclear. We analyzed how fluctuations in signaling protein concentrations give rise to cell-to-cell variability in protein kinase signaling using analytical theory and numerical simulations. We characterized the dose-response behavior of signaling cascades by calculating the stimulus level at which a pathway responds ('pathway sensitivity') and the maximal activation level upon strong stimulation. Minimal kinase cascades with gradual dose-response behavior show strong variability, because the pathway sensitivity and the maximal activation level cannot be simultaneously invariant. Negative feedback regulation resolves this trade-off and coordinately reduces fluctuations in the pathway sensitivity and maximal activation. Feedbacks acting at different levels in the cascade control different aspects of the dose-response curve, thereby synergistically reducing the variability. We also investigated more complex, ultrasensitive signaling cascades capable of switch-like decision making, and found that these can be inherently robust to protein concentration fluctuations. We describe how the cell-to-cell variability of ultrasensitive signaling systems can be actively regulated, e.g., by altering the expression of phosphatase(s) or by feedback/feedforward loops. Our calculations reveal that slow transcriptional negative feedback loops allow for variability suppression while maintaining switch-like decision making. Taken together, we describe design principles of signaling cascades that promote robustness. Our results may explain why certain signaling cascades like the yeast pheromone pathway show switch-like decision making with little cell-to-cell variability" |
Keywords: | "Feedback *Models, Biological Protein Kinases/*metabolism *Signal Transduction;" |
Notes: | "MedlineJeschke, Matthias Baumgartner, Stephan Legewie, Stefan eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2013/12/18 PLoS Comput Biol. 2013; 9(12):e1003357. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003357. Epub 2013 Dec 5" |