Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes

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Standard

Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes. / Feng, Song; Saez Cornellana, Meritxell; Wiuf, Carsten Henrik; Feliu, Elisenda; Soyer, Orkun S.

I: Journal of the Royal Society. Interface, Bind 13, Nr. 123, 20160524., 10.2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Feng, S, Saez Cornellana, M, Wiuf, CH, Feliu, E & Soyer, OS 2016, 'Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes', Journal of the Royal Society. Interface, bind 13, nr. 123, 20160524.. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2016.0524

APA

Feng, S., Saez Cornellana, M., Wiuf, C. H., Feliu, E., & Soyer, O. S. (2016). Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes. Journal of the Royal Society. Interface, 13(123), [20160524.]. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2016.0524

Vancouver

Feng S, Saez Cornellana M, Wiuf CH, Feliu E, Soyer OS. Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes. Journal of the Royal Society. Interface. 2016 okt.;13(123). 20160524. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2016.0524

Author

Feng, Song ; Saez Cornellana, Meritxell ; Wiuf, Carsten Henrik ; Feliu, Elisenda ; Soyer, Orkun S. / Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes. I: Journal of the Royal Society. Interface. 2016 ; Bind 13, Nr. 123.

Bibtex

@article{9c0f85b99e9d4079a2503170ab6043af,
title = "Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes",
abstract = "Bistability, and more generally multistability, is a key system dynamics feature enabling decision-making and memory in cells. Deciphering the molecular determinants of multistability is thus crucial for a better understanding of cellular pathways and their (re)engineering in synthetic biology. Here, we show that a key motif found predominantly in eukaryotic signalling systems, namely a futile signalling cycle, can display bistability when featuring a two-state kinase. We provide necessary and sufficient mathematical conditions on the kinetic parameters of this motif that guarantee the existence of multiple steady states. These conditions foster the intuition that bistability arises as a consequence of competition between the two states of the kinase. Extending from this result, we find that increasing the number of kinase states linearly translates into an increase in the number of steady states in the system. These findings reveal, to our knowledge, a new mechanism for the generation of bistability and multistability in cellular signalling systems. Further the futile cycle featuring a two-state kinase is among the smallest bistable signalling motifs. We show that multi-state kinases and the described competition-based motif are part of several natural signalling systems and thereby could enable them to implement complex information processing through multistability. These results indicate that multi-state kinases in signalling systems are readily exploited by natural evolution and could equally be used by synthetic approaches for the generation of multistable information processing systems at the cellular level.",
author = "Song Feng and {Saez Cornellana}, Meritxell and Wiuf, {Carsten Henrik} and Elisenda Feliu and Soyer, {Orkun S}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2016 The Authors.",
year = "2016",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1098/rsif.2016.0524",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Journal of the Royal Society. Interface",
issn = "1742-5689",
publisher = "The/Royal Society",
number = "123",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Core signalling motif displaying multistability through multi-state enzymes

AU - Feng, Song

AU - Saez Cornellana, Meritxell

AU - Wiuf, Carsten Henrik

AU - Feliu, Elisenda

AU - Soyer, Orkun S

N1 - © 2016 The Authors.

PY - 2016/10

Y1 - 2016/10

N2 - Bistability, and more generally multistability, is a key system dynamics feature enabling decision-making and memory in cells. Deciphering the molecular determinants of multistability is thus crucial for a better understanding of cellular pathways and their (re)engineering in synthetic biology. Here, we show that a key motif found predominantly in eukaryotic signalling systems, namely a futile signalling cycle, can display bistability when featuring a two-state kinase. We provide necessary and sufficient mathematical conditions on the kinetic parameters of this motif that guarantee the existence of multiple steady states. These conditions foster the intuition that bistability arises as a consequence of competition between the two states of the kinase. Extending from this result, we find that increasing the number of kinase states linearly translates into an increase in the number of steady states in the system. These findings reveal, to our knowledge, a new mechanism for the generation of bistability and multistability in cellular signalling systems. Further the futile cycle featuring a two-state kinase is among the smallest bistable signalling motifs. We show that multi-state kinases and the described competition-based motif are part of several natural signalling systems and thereby could enable them to implement complex information processing through multistability. These results indicate that multi-state kinases in signalling systems are readily exploited by natural evolution and could equally be used by synthetic approaches for the generation of multistable information processing systems at the cellular level.

AB - Bistability, and more generally multistability, is a key system dynamics feature enabling decision-making and memory in cells. Deciphering the molecular determinants of multistability is thus crucial for a better understanding of cellular pathways and their (re)engineering in synthetic biology. Here, we show that a key motif found predominantly in eukaryotic signalling systems, namely a futile signalling cycle, can display bistability when featuring a two-state kinase. We provide necessary and sufficient mathematical conditions on the kinetic parameters of this motif that guarantee the existence of multiple steady states. These conditions foster the intuition that bistability arises as a consequence of competition between the two states of the kinase. Extending from this result, we find that increasing the number of kinase states linearly translates into an increase in the number of steady states in the system. These findings reveal, to our knowledge, a new mechanism for the generation of bistability and multistability in cellular signalling systems. Further the futile cycle featuring a two-state kinase is among the smallest bistable signalling motifs. We show that multi-state kinases and the described competition-based motif are part of several natural signalling systems and thereby could enable them to implement complex information processing through multistability. These results indicate that multi-state kinases in signalling systems are readily exploited by natural evolution and could equally be used by synthetic approaches for the generation of multistable information processing systems at the cellular level.

U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2016.0524

DO - 10.1098/rsif.2016.0524

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27733693

VL - 13

JO - Journal of the Royal Society. Interface

JF - Journal of the Royal Society. Interface

SN - 1742-5689

IS - 123

M1 - 20160524.

ER -

ID: 167880905