97 research outputs found
Pulsed Feedback Defers Cellular Differentiation
Environmental signals induce diverse cellular differentiation programs. In certain systems, cells defer differentiation for extended time periods after the signal appears, proliferating through multiple rounds of cell division before committing to a new fate. How can cells set a deferral time much longer than the cell cycle? Here we study Bacillus subtilis cells that respond to sudden nutrient limitation with multiple rounds of growth and division before differentiating into spores. A well-characterized genetic circuit controls the concentration and phosphorylation of the master regulator Spo0A, which rises to a critical concentration to initiate sporulation. However, it remains unclear how this circuit enables cells to defer sporulation for multiple cell cycles. Using quantitative time-lapse fluorescence microscopy of Spo0A dynamics in individual cells, we observed pulses of Spo0A phosphorylation at a characteristic cell cycle phase. Pulse amplitudes grew systematically and cell-autonomously over multiple cell cycles leading up to sporulation. This pulse growth required a key positive feedback loop involving the sporulation kinases, without which the deferral of sporulation became ultrasensitive to kinase expression. Thus, deferral is controlled by a pulsed positive feedback loop in which kinase expression is activated by pulses of Spo0A phosphorylation. This pulsed positive feedback architecture provides a more robust mechanism for setting deferral times than constitutive kinase expression. Finally, using mathematical modeling, we show how pulsing and time delays together enable “polyphasic” positive feedback, in which different parts of a feedback loop are active at different times. Polyphasic feedback can enable more accurate tuning of long deferral times. Together, these results suggest that Bacillus subtilis uses a pulsed positive feedback loop to implement a “timer” that operates over timescales much longer than a cell cycle
PRRT2 controls neuronal excitability by negatively modulating Na+ channel 1.2/1.6 activity
Proline-rich transmembrane protein 2 (PRRT2) is the causative gene for a heterogeneous group of familial paroxysmal neurological
disorders that include seizures with onset in the first year of life (benign familial infantile seizures), paroxysmal kinesigenic
dyskinesia or a combination of both. Most of the PRRT2 mutations are loss-of-function leading to haploinsufficiency and 80%
of the patients carry the same frameshift mutation (c.649dupC; p.Arg217Profs*8), which leads to a premature stop codon. To
model the disease and dissect the physiological role of PRRT2, we studied the phenotype of neurons differentiated from induced
pluripotent stem cells from previously described heterozygous and homozygous siblings carrying the c.649dupC mutation. Singlecell
patch-clamp experiments on induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons from homozygous patients showed increased Na+
currents that were fully rescued by expression of wild-type PRRT2. Closely similar electrophysiological features were observed in
primary neurons obtained from the recently characterized PRRT2 knockout mouse. This phenotype was associated with an
increased length of the axon initial segment and with markedly augmented spontaneous and evoked firing and bursting activities
evaluated, at the network level, by multi-electrode array electrophysiology. Using HEK-293 cells stably expressing Nav channel
subtypes, we demonstrated that the expression of PRRT2 decreases the membrane exposure and Na+ current of Nav1.2/Nav1.6,
but not Nav1.1, channels. Moreover, PRRT2 directly interacted with Nav1.2/Nav1.6 channels and induced a negative shift in the
voltage-dependence of inactivation and a slow-down in the recovery from inactivation. In addition, by co-immunoprecipitation
assays, we showed that the PRRT2-Nav interaction also occurs in brain tissue. The study demonstrates that the lack of PRRT2
leads to a hyperactivity of voltage-dependent Na+ channels in homozygous PRRT2 knockout human and mouse neurons and that,
in addition to the reported synaptic functions, PRRT2 is an important negative modulator of Nav1.2 and Nav1.6 channels. Given
the predominant paroxysmal character of PRRT2-linked diseases, the disturbance in cellular excitability by lack of negative
modulation of Na+ channels appears as the key pathogenetic mechanism
Ultrasensitivity of the Bacillus subtilis sporulation decision
Starving Bacillus subtilis cells execute a gene expression program
resulting in the formation of stress-resistant spores. Sporulation
master regulator, Spo0A, is activated by a phosphorelay and controls
the expression of a multitude of genes, including the forespore-
specific sigma factor σF and the mother cell-specific sigma
factor σE. Identification of the system-level mechanism of the sporulation
decision is hindered by a lack of direct control over Spo0A
activity. This limitation can be overcome by using a synthetic system
in which Spo0A activation is controlled by inducing expression
of phosphorelay kinase KinA. This induction results in a switch-like
increase in the number of sporulating cells at a threshold of KinA.
Using a combination of mathematical modeling and single-cell microscopy,
we investigate the origin and physiological significance
of this ultrasensitive threshold. The results indicate that the phosphorelay
is unable to achieve a sufficiently fast and ultrasensitive
response via its positive feedback architecture, suggesting that the
sporulation decision is made downstream. In contrast, activation
of σF in the forespore and of σE in the mother cell compartments
occurs via a cascade of coherent feed-forward loops, and thereby
can produce fast and ultrasensitive responses as a result of KinA
induction. Unlike σF activation, σE activation in the mother cell
compartment only occurs above the KinA threshold, resulting in
completion of sporulation. Thus, ultrasensitive σE activation explains
the KinA threshold for sporulation induction. We therefore infer
that under uncertain conditions, cells initiate sporulation but postpone
making the sporulation decision to average stochastic fluctuations
and to achieve a robust population response
Chemosensory Cues to Conspecific Emotional Stress Activate Amygdala in Humans
Alarm substances are airborne chemical signals, released by an individual into the environment, which communicate emotional stress between conspecifics. Here we tested whether humans, like other mammals, are able to detect emotional stress in others by chemosensory cues. Sweat samples collected from individuals undergoing an acute emotional stressor, with exercise as a control, were pooled and presented to a separate group of participants (blind to condition) during four experiments. In an fMRI experiment and its replication, we showed that scanned participants showed amygdala activation in response to samples obtained from donors undergoing an emotional, but not physical, stressor. An odor-discrimination experiment suggested the effect was primarily due to emotional, and not odor, differences between the two stimuli. A fourth experiment investigated behavioral effects, demonstrating that stress samples sharpened emotion-perception of ambiguous facial stimuli. Together, our findings suggest human chemosensory signaling of emotional stress, with neurobiological and behavioral effects
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