Spatio-temporal dynamics of a cell signal pathway with negative feedbacks: the MAPK/ERK pathway.

Eur Phys J E Soft Matter

Instituto de Matemáticas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, C.P. 76230, Juriquilla Querétaro, Mexico.

Published: March 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the dynamics of a cell signaling pathway modeled by a set of six equations that represent the MAPK/ERK pathway, focusing on negative feedback in signal transmission.
  • The research analyzes how changes in a feedback parameter (μ(r)(j)) impact signaling under various kinetic regimes, revealing that both activated protein levels (TAPPs) exhibit maxima during signal transduction.
  • Findings align with experimental data, suggesting important implications for understanding the physiological behavior of cell signaling in response to regulation and feedback mechanisms.

Article Abstract

We studied the spatio-temporal dynamics of a cell signal cascade with negative feedback that quantitatively emulates the regulative process that occurs in the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase/Extracellular Regulated Kinase (MAPK/ERK) pathway. The model consists of a set of six coupled reaction-diffusion equations that describes the dynamics of the six-module pathway. In the basic module the active form of the protein transmits the signal to the next pathway’s module. As suggested by experiments, the model considers that the fifth module's kinase down-regulates the first and third modules. The feedback parameter is defined as, μ(r)( j)= k(kin)5/k(kin)(j), (j = 1, 3). We analysed the pathway's dynamics for μ(r)( j) = 0.10, 1.0, and 10 in the kinetic regimes: i) saturation of both kinases and phosphatases, ii) saturation of the phosphatases and iii) saturation of the kinases. For a regulated pathway the Total Activated Protein Profiles (TAPPs) as a function of time develop a maximum during the transient stage in the three kinetic regimes. These maxima become higher and their positions shift to longer times downstream. This scenario also applies to the TAPP's regulatory kinase that sums up its inhibitory action to that of the phosphatases leading to a maximum. Nevertheless, when μ(r)(j)= 1.0 , the TAPPs develop two maxima, with the second maximum being almost imperceptible. These results are in qualitative agreement with experimental data obtained from NIH 3T3 mouse fibroblasts. In addition, analyses of the stationary states as a function of position indicate that in the kinetic regime i) which is of physiological interest, signal transduction occurs with a relatively large propagation length for the three values of the regulative parameter. However, for μ(r)(j)= 0.10 , the sixth module concentration profile is transmitted with approximately 45% of its full value. The results obtained for μ(r)(j) = 10 , indicate that the first five concentration profiles are small with a short propagation length; nonetheless, the last concentration profile, c6, attains more than 90% of its full value with a relatively large propagation length as an indication of signal transduction. Signal transduction also occurred favourably in the kinetic regimes ii) and iii), but the signal was longer-ranged in the regime ii).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epje/i2016-16028-3DOI Listing

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