9 research outputs found
Molecular mechanisms for a switch-like mating decision in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Les changements évolutifs nous instruisent sur les nombreuses innovations permettant à chaque organisme de maximiser ses aptitudes en choisissant le partenaire approprié, telles que les caractéristiques sexuelles secondaires, les patrons comportementaux, les attractifs chimiques et les mécanismes sensoriels y répondant. L'haploïde de la levure Saccharomyces cerevisiae distingue son partenaire en interprétant le gradient de la concentration d'une phéromone sécrétée par les partenaires potentiels grâce à un réseau de protéines signalétiques de type kinase activées par la mitose (MAPK). La décision de la liaison sexuelle chez la levure est un événement en "tout–ourien",
à la manière d'un interrupteur. Les cellules haploïdes choisissent leur partenaire
sexuel en fonction de la concentration de phéromones qu’il produit. Seul le partenaire à proximité sécrétant des concentrations de phéromones égales ou supérieures à une
concentration critique est retenu. Les faibles signaux de phéromones sont attribués à des partenaires pouvant mener à des accouplements infructueux. Notre compréhension du mécanisme moléculaire contrôlant cet interrupteur de la décision d'accouplement reste encore mince.
Dans le cadre de la présente thèse, je démontre que le mécanisme de décision de la
liaison sexuelle provient de la compétition pour le contrôle de l'état de phosphorylation de quatre sites sur la protéine d'échafaudage Ste5, entre la MAPK, Fus3, et la phosphatase,Ptc1. Cette compétition résulte en la dissociation de type « intérupteur » entre Fus3 et
Ste5, nécessaire à la prise de décision d'accouplement en "tout-ou-rien". Ainsi, la décision de la liaison sexuelle s'effectue à une étape précoce de la voie de réponse aux phéromones et se produit rapidement, peut-être dans le but de prévenir la perte d’un partenaire potentiel. Nous argumentons que l'architecture du circuit Fus3-Ste5-Ptc1 génère un mécanisme inédit d'ultrasensibilité, ressemblant à "l'ultrasensibilité d'ordre zéro", qui
résiste aux variations de concentration de ces protéines. Cette robustesse assure que
l'accouplement puisse se produire en dépit de la stochasticité cellulaire ou de variations génétiques entre individus.Je démontre, par la suite, qu'un évènement précoce en réponse aux signaux
extracellulaires recrutant Ste5 Ă la membrane plasmique est Ă©galement ultrasensible Ă
l'augmentation de la concentration de phéromones et que cette ultrasensibilité est
engendrée par la déphosphorylation de huit phosphosites en N-terminal sur Ste5 par la
phosphatase Ptc1 lorsqu'elle est associée à Ste5 via la protéine polarisante, Bem1.
L'interférence dans ce mécanisme provoque une perte de l'ultrasensibilité et réduit, du
même coup, l'amplitude et la fidélité de la voie de réponse aux phéromones à la
stimulation. Ces changements se reflètent en une réduction de la fidélité et de la précision
de la morphologie attribuable à la réponse d'accouplement. La polarisation dans
l'assemblage du complexe protéique à la surface de la membrane plasmique est un thème
général persistant dans tous les organismes, de la bactérie à l'humain. Un tel complexe est
en mesure d'accroître l'efficacité, la fidélité et la spécificité de la transmission du signal.
L'ensemble de nos découvertes démontre que l'ultrasensibilité, la précision et la
robustesse de la réponse aux phéromones découlent de la régulation de la phosphorylation
stoichiométrique de deux groupes de phosphosites sur Ste5, par la phosphatase Ptc1, un
groupe effectuant le recrutement ultrasensible de Ste5 Ă la membrane et un autre incitant
la dissociation et l'activation ultrasensible de la MAPK terminal Fus3. Le rĂ´le modulateur
de Ste5 dans la décision de la destinée cellulaire étend le répertoire fonctionnel des
protéines d'échafaudage bien au-delà de l'accessoire dans la spécificité et l'efficacité des
traitements de l'information. La régulation de la dynamique des caractères signal-réponse
à travers une telle régulation modulaire des groupes de phosphosites sur des protéines
d'échafaudage combinées à l'assemblage à la membrane peut être un moyen général par
lequel la polarisation du destin cellulaire est obtenue. Des mécanismes similaires peuvent
contrôler les décisions cellulaires dans les organismes complexes et peuvent être
compromis dans des dérèglements cellulaires, tel que le cancer.
Finalement, sur un thème relié, je présente la découverte d'un nouveau mécanisme
où le seuil de la concentration de phéromones est contrôlé par une voie sensorielle de
nutriments, ajustant, de cette manière, le point prédéterminé dans lequel la quantité et la
qualité des nutriments accessibles dans l'environnement déterminent le seuil à partir
duquel la levure s'accouple. La sous-unité régulatrice de la kinase à protéine A (PKA),Bcy1, une composante clé du réseau signalétique du senseur aux nutriments, interagit
directement avec la sous-unité α des petites protéines G, Gpa1, le premier effecteur dans
le réseau de réponse aux phéromones. L'interaction Bcy1-Gpa1 est accrue lorsque la
cellule croit en présence d'un sucre idéal, le glucose, diminuant la concentration seuil
auquel la décision d'accouplement est activée. Compromettre l'interaction Bcy1-Gpa1 ou
inactiver Bcy1 accroît la concentration seuil nécessaire à une réponse aux phéromones.
Nous argumentons qu'en ajustant leur sensibilité, les levures peuvent intégrer le stimulus
provenant des phéromones au niveau du glucose extracellulaire, priorisant la décision de
survie dans un milieu pauvre ou continuer leur cycle sexuel en choisissant un
accouplement.Evolution has resulted in numerous innovations that allow organisms to maximize
their fitness by choosing particular mating partners, including secondary sexual
characteristics, behavioural patterns, chemical attractants and corresponding sensory
mechanisms. The haploid yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae selects mating partners by
interpreting the concentration gradient of pheromone secreted by potential mates through
a network of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling proteins. The mating
decision in yeast is an all-or-none, or switch-like, response that allows cells to make
accurate decisions about which among potential partners to mate with and to filter weak
pheromone signals, thus avoiding inappropriate commitment to mating by responding
only at or above critical concentrations when a mate is sufficiently close. The molecular
mechanisms that govern the switch-like mating decision are poorly understood.
In this thesis I demonstrate that the switching mechanism arises from competition
between the MAPK Fus3 and a phosphatase Ptc1 for control of the phosphorylation state
of four sites on the scaffold protein Ste5. This competition results in a switch-like
dissociation of Fus3 from Ste5 that is necessary to generate the switch-like mating
response. Thus, the decision to mate is made at an early stage in the pheromone pathway
and occurs rapidly, perhaps to prevent the loss of the potential mate to competitors. We
argue that the architecture of the Fus3–Ste5–Ptc1 circuit generates a novel ultrasensitivity
mechanism that resembles “zero-order ultrasensitivity”, which is robust to variations in
the concentrations of these proteins. This robustness helps assure that mating can occur
despite stochastic or genetic variation between individuals.
I then demonstrate that during the mating response, an early event of Ste5
recruitment to plasma membrane is ultrasensitive and that it is generated by
dephosphorylation of eight N-terminal phosphosites on Ste5 by the phosphatase Ptc1
when associated with Ste5 via the polarization protein Bem1. Interference with this
mechanism results in loss of ultrasensitivity and reduced amplitude and therefore fidelity of the pheromone signaling response. These changes are reflected in reduced fidelity and
accuracy of the morphogenic mating response. Polarized assembly of signaling protein
complexes at the plasma membrane surface is a general theme recapitulated in all
organisms from bacteria to humans. Such complexes can increase the efficiency, fidelity
and specificity of signal transduction. Together with our previous findings, our results
demonstrate that ultrasensitivity, accuracy and robustness of the pheromone response
occurs through regulation of the stoichiometry of phosphorylation of two clusters of
phosphosites on Ste5, by Ptc1, one cluster mediating ultrasensitive recruitment of Ste5 to
the membrane and the other, ultrasensitive dissociation and activation of the terminal
MAP kinase Fus3. The role of Ste5 as a direct modulator of a cell-fate decision expands
the functional repertoire of scaffold proteins beyond providing specificity and efficiency
of information processing. Regulation of dynamic signal-response characteristics through
such modular regulation of clusters of phosphosites may be a general means by which cell
fate decisions are achieved. Similar mechanisms may govern cellular decisions in higher
organisms and be disrupted in cancer.
Finally, in a related theme, I present the discovery of a novel mechanisms by
which the threshold of pheromone response is controlled by a nutrient-sensing pathway,
thus adjusting the set-point at which the quantity and quality of nutrients available in the
environment set the threshold of pheromone at which yeast will mate. The regulatory
subunit of protein kinase A (PKA), Bcy1, a key component of a nutrient sensing signaling
network, directly interacts with the α subunit of G-protein, Gpa1, the primary effector of
the pheromone signaling network. The Bcy1-Gpa1 interaction is enhanced when cells are
grown in their ideal carbon source glucose, lowering the threshold concentration at which
the mating response is activated. Disruption of Bcy1-Gpa1 interaction or Bcy1 deletion
increased the threshold concentration for the mating response. We argue that by adjusting
their sensitivity, yeast can integrate pheromone stimulus with glucose levels and prioritize decisions to survive in a nutrient-starved environment or to continue their sexual cycle by mating
Reconstruction of complex single-cell trajectories using CellRouter
A better understanding of the cell-fate transitions that occur in complex cellular ecosystems in normal development and disease could inform cell engineering efforts and lead to improved therapies. However, a major challenge is to simultaneously identify new cell states, and their transitions, to elucidate the gene expression dynamics governing cell-type diversification. Here, we present CellRouter, a multifaceted single-cell analysis platform that identifies complex cell-state transition trajectories by using flow networks to explore the subpopulation structure of multi-dimensional, single-cell omics data. We demonstrate its versatility by applying CellRouter to single-cell RNA sequencing data sets to reconstruct cell-state transition trajectories during hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) differentiation to the erythroid, myeloid and lymphoid lineages, as well as during re-specification of cell identity by cellular reprogramming of monocytes and B-cells to HSPCs. CellRouter opens previously undescribed paths for in-depth characterization of complex cellular ecosystems and establishment of enhanced cell engineering approaches
A Novel Genetic Screen Implicates Elm1 in the Inactivation of the Yeast Transcription Factor SBF
BACKGROUND: Despite extensive large scale analyses of expression and protein-protein interactions (PPI) in the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, over a thousand yeast genes remain uncharacterized. We have developed a novel strategy in yeast that directly combines genetics with proteomics in the same screen to assign function to proteins based on the observation of genetic perturbations of sentinel protein interactions (GePPI). As proof of principle of the GePPI screen, we applied it to identify proteins involved in the regulation of an important yeast cell cycle transcription factor, SBF that activates gene expression during G1 and S phase. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS: The principle of GePPI is that if a protein is involved in a pathway of interest, deletion of the corresponding gene will result in perturbation of sentinel PPIs that report on the activity of the pathway. We created a fluorescent protein-fragment complementation assay (PCA) to detect the interaction between Cdc28 and Swi4, which leads to the inactivation of SBF. The PCA signal was quantified by microscopy and image analysis in deletion strains corresponding to 25 candidate genes that are periodically expressed during the cell cycle and are substrates of Cdc28. We showed that the serine-threonine kinase Elm1 plays a role in the inactivation of SBF and that phosphorylation of Elm1 by Cdc28 may be a mechanism to inactivate Elm1 upon completion of mitosis. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings demonstrate that GePPI is an effective strategy to directly link proteins of known or unknown function to a specific biological pathway of interest. The ease in generating PCA assays for any protein interaction and the availability of the yeast deletion strain collection allows GePPI to be applied to any cellular network. In addition, the high degree of conservation between yeast and mammalian proteins and pathways suggest GePPI could be used to generate insight into human disease
Nac1 Coordinates a Sub-network of Pluripotency Factors to Regulate Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation
Summary: Pluripotent cells give rise to distinct cell types during development and are regulated by often self-reinforcing molecular networks. How such networks allow cells to differentiate is less well understood. Here, we use integrative methods to show that external signals induce reorganization of the mouse embryonic stem cell pluripotency network and that a sub-network of four factors, Nac1, Oct4, Tcf3, and Sox2, regulates their differentiation into the alternative mesendodermal and neuroectodermal fates. In the mesendodermal fate, Nac1 and Oct4 were constrained within quantitative windows, whereas Sox2 and Tcf3 were repressed. In contrast, in the neuroectodermal fate, Sox2 and Tcf3 were constrained while Nac1 and Oct4 were repressed. In addition, we show that Nac1 coordinates differentiation by activating Oct4 and inhibiting both Sox2 and Tcf3. Reorganization of progenitor cell networks around shared factors might be a common differentiation strategy and our integrative approach provides a general methodology for delineating such networks. : Progenitor cells choose a distinct fate between alternative choices during development. Malleshaiah et al. now show that pluripotent mouse embryonic stem cells decide between mesendodermal and neuroectodermal fates through a sub-network of pluripotency transcription factors, Oct4, Sox2, Tcf3, and Nac1, that is coordinated by Nac1 and constrains protein levels within distinct ranges in each fate
The NAMPT Inhibitor FK866 Increases Metformin Sensitivity in Pancreatic Cancer Cells
Pancreatic cancer (pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: PDAC) is one of the most aggressive neoplastic diseases. Metformin use has been associated with reduced pancreatic cancer incidence and better survival in diabetics. Metformin has been shown to inhibit PDAC cells growth and survival, both in vitro and in vivo. However, clinical trials using metformin have failed to reduce pancreatic cancer progression in patients, raising important questions about molecular mechanisms that protect tumor cells from the antineoplastic activities of metformin. We confirmed that metformin acts through inhibition of mitochondrial complex I, decreasing the NAD+/NADH ratio, and that NAD+/NADH homeostasis determines metformin sensitivity in several cancer cell lines. Metabolites that can restore the NAD+/NADH ratio caused PDAC cells to be resistant to metformin. In addition, metformin treatment of PDAC cell lines induced a compensatory NAMPT expression, increasing the pool of cellular NAD+. The NAMPT inhibitor FK866 sensitized PDAC cells to the antiproliferative effects of metformin in vitro and decreased the cellular NAD+ pool. Intriguingly, FK866 combined with metformin increased survival in mice bearing KP4 cell line xenografts, but not in mice with PANC-1 cell line xenografts. Transcriptome analysis revealed that the drug combination reactivated genes in the p53 pathway and oxidative stress, providing new insights about the mechanisms leading to cancer cell death
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Haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from human pluripotent stem cells
A variety of tissue lineages can be differentiated from pluripotent stem cells by mimicking embryonic development through stepwise exposure to morphogens, or by conversion of one differentiated cell type into another by enforced expression of master transcription factors. Here, to yield functional human haematopoietic stem cells, we perform morphogen-directed differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells into haemogenic endothelium followed by screening of 26 candidate haematopoietic stem-cell-specifying transcription factors for their capacity to promote multi-lineage haematopoietic engraftment in mouse hosts. We recover seven transcription factors (ERG, HOXA5, HOXA9, HOXA10, LCOR, RUNX1 and SPI1) that are sufficient to convert haemogenic endothelium into haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells that engraft myeloid, B and T cells in primary and secondary mouse recipients. Our combined approach of morphogen-driven differentiation and transcription-factor-mediated cell fate conversion produces haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from pluripotent stem cells and holds promise for modelling haematopoietic disease in humanized mice and for therapeutic strategies in genetic blood disorders