56 research outputs found

    Quantification of the glycogen cascade system: the ultrasensitive responses of liver glycogen synthase and muscle phosphorylase are due to distinctive regulatory designs

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    BACKGROUND: Signaling pathways include intricate networks of reversible covalent modification cycles. Such multicyclic enzyme cascades amplify the input stimulus, cause integration of multiple signals and exhibit sensitive output responses. Regulation of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase by reversible covalent modification cycles exemplifies signal transduction by enzyme cascades. Although this system for regulating glycogen synthesis and breakdown appears similar in all tissues, subtle differences have been identified. For example, phosphatase-1, a dephosphorylating enzyme of the system, is regulated quite differently in muscle and liver. Do these small differences in regulatory architecture affect the overall performance of the glycogen cascade in a specific tissue? We address this question by analyzing the regulatory structure of the glycogen cascade system in liver and muscle cells at steady state. RESULTS: The glycogen cascade system in liver and muscle cells was analyzed at steady state and the results were compared with literature data. We found that the cascade system exhibits highly sensitive switch-like responses to changes in cyclic AMP concentration and the outputs are surprisingly different in the two tissues. In muscle, glycogen phosphorylase is more sensitive than glycogen synthase to cyclic AMP, while the opposite is observed in liver. Furthermore, when the liver undergoes a transition from starved to fed-state, the futile cycle of simultaneous glycogen synthesis and degradation switches to reciprocal regulation. Under such a transition, different proportions of active glycogen synthase and phosphorylase can coexist due to the varying inhibition of glycogen-synthase phosphatase by active phosphorylase. CONCLUSION: The highly sensitive responses of glycogen synthase in liver and phosphorylase in muscle to primary stimuli can be attributed to distinctive regulatory designs in the glycogen cascade system. The different sensitivities of these two enzymes may exemplify the adaptive strategies employed by liver and muscle cells to meet specific cellular demands

    A steady state analysis indicates that negative feedback regulation of PTP1B by Akt elicits bistability in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation

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    BACKGROUND: The phenomenon of switch-like response to graded input signal is the theme involved in various signaling pathways in living systems. Positive feedback loops or double negative feedback loops embedded with nonlinearity exhibit these switch-like bistable responses. Such feedback regulations exist in insulin signaling pathway as well. METHODS: In the current manuscript, a steady state analysis of the metabolic insulin-signaling pathway is presented. The threshold concentration of insulin required for glucose transporter GLUT4 translocation was studied with variation in system parameters and component concentrations. The dose response curves of GLUT4 translocation at various concentration of insulin obtained by steady state analysis were quantified in-terms of half saturation constant. RESULTS: We show that, insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation can operate as a bistable switch, which ensures that GLUT4 settles between two discrete, but mutually exclusive stable steady states. The threshold concentration of insulin required for GLUT4 translocation changes with variation in system parameters and component concentrations, thus providing insights into possible pathological conditions. CONCLUSION: A steady state analysis indicates that negative feedback regulation of phosphatase PTP1B by Akt elicits bistability in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation. The threshold concentration of insulin required for GLUT4 translocation and the corresponding bistable response at different system parameters and component concentrations was compared with reported experimental observations on specific defects in regulation of the system

    Engineering naturally occurring trans-acting non-coding RNAs to sense molecular signals

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    Non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) are versatile regulators in cellular networks. While most trans-acting ncRNAs possess well-defined mechanisms that can regulate transcription or translation, they generally lack the ability to directly sense cellular signals. In this work, we describe a set of design principles for fusing ncRNAs to RNA aptamers to engineer allosteric RNA fusion molecules that modulate the activity of ncRNAs in a ligand-inducible way in Escherichia coli. We apply these principles to ncRNA regulators that can regulate translation (IS10 ncRNA) and transcription (pT181 ncRNA), and demonstrate that our design strategy exhibits high modularity between the aptamer ligand-sensing motif and the ncRNA target-recognition motif, which allows us to reconfigure these two motifs to engineer orthogonally acting fusion molecules that respond to different ligands and regulate different targets in the same cell. Finally, we show that the same ncRNA fused with different sensing domains results in a sensory-level NOR gate that integrates multiple input signals to perform genetic logic. These ligand-sensing ncRNA regulators provide useful tools to modulate the activity of structurally related families of ncRNAs, and building upon the growing body of RNA synthetic biology, our ability to design aptamer–ncRNA fusion molecules offers new ways to engineer ligand-sensing regulatory circuits

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    Effect of the MAPK cascade structure, nuclear translocation and regulation of transcription factors on gene expression

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    The mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) cascade system represents a highly conserved prototype of signal transduction by enzyme cascades. One of the best-studied properties of the MAPK system is its ability to convert graded input stimulus to switch-like all-or-none responses. Previous theoretical studies have centered on quantifying dual phosphorylated MAPK as a final output response and have not incorporated its influence on the regulation of gene expression. The main objective of the current work is to understand the regulatory effect of positive feedback loop embedded in the MAPK cascade, nuclear translocation of active MAPK, phosphorylation and activation of nuclear target proteins on the regulation of specific gene expression. To achieve this objective, we have simulated the MAPK cascade system, which resembles Hog1p activation pathway in yeast, at steady state. Thus, the input signal to the MAPK system is correlated with gene expression as a final system-level output response. The steady state simulation results suggest that other than regulating the signal propagation through cascades, the nuclear translocation of activated MAPK and subsequent regulation of gene expression represent one of the key modes to control the threshold level of response. This work proposes that, it is essential to consider the compartmental distributions of signaling species and the corresponding regulatory mechanisms of gene expression to study the system-level performance of signaling modules such as the MAPK cascade. Such an analysis will relate the extracellular cues to the final phenotypic response by capturing the mechanistic details of the signaling pathway.© Elsevie

    A theoretical steady state analysis indicates that induction of Escherichia coli glnALG operon can display all-or-none behavior

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    The nitrogen starvation response in Escherichia coli is characterized by the enhanced expression of Ntr regulon, comprising hundreds of genes including the one coding for nitrogen-assimilating glutamine synthetase (GS) enzyme. The biosynthesis and activity of GS is regulated mainly by nitrogen and carbon levels in the cell and monitored by three functionally separable interconnected modules. Here, we present the steady-state modular analysis of this intricate network made up of a GS bicyclic closed-loop cascade, a NRII–NRI two-component system, and an autoregulated glnALG operon encoding genes for GS, NRII, and NRI. Our simulation results indicate that the transcriptional output of glnALG operon is discrete and switch-like, whereas the activation of transcription factor NRI is graded, and the inactivation of GS is moderately ultrasensitive to input stimulus glutamine. The autoregulation of the NRII–NRI two-component system was found to be essential for the all-or-none induction of the glnALG operon. Furthermore, we show that the autoregulated two-component system modulates the total active GS by delineating the GS activity from its biosynthetic regulation. Our analysis indicates that the exclusive relationship between GS activity and its synthesis is brought about by the autoregulated two-component system. The modularity of the network endows the system to respond differently to nitrogen depending on the carbon status of the cell. Through a system-level quantification, we conclude that the discrete switch-like transcriptional response of the E. coli glnALG operon to nutrient starvation prevents the premature initiation of transcription and may represent the desperate attempt by the cell to survive in limiting conditions.© Elsevie

    A Phage Foundry Framework to Systematically Develop Viral Countermeasures to Combat Antibiotic-Resistant Bacterial Pathogens.

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    At its current rate, the rise of antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) infections is predicted to paralyze our industries and healthcare facilities while becoming the leading global cause of loss of human life. With limited new antibiotics on the horizon, we need to invest in alternative solutions. Bacteriophages (phages)-viruses targeting bacteria-offer a powerful alternative approach to tackle bacterial infections. Despite recent advances in using phages to treat recalcitrant AMR infections, the field lacks systematic development of phage therapies scalable to different applications. We propose a Phage Foundry framework to establish metrics for phage characterization and to fill the knowledge and technological gaps in phage therapeutics. Coordinated investment in AMR surveillance, sampling, characterization, and data sharing procedures will enable rational exploitation of phages for treatments. A fully realized Phage Foundry will enhance the sharing of knowledge, technology, and viral reagents in an equitable manner and will accelerate the biobased economy
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