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Phosphorelays Provide Tunable Signal Processing Capabilities for the Cell
Authors:Varun B Kothamachu  Elisenda Feliu  Carsten Wiuf  Luca Cardelli  Orkun S Soyer
Institution:1.Systems Biology Program, College of Engineering, Computing and Mathematics, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom;2.Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 5, Copenhagen, Denmark;3.Microsoft Research Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom;4.School of Life Sciences, Gibbet Hill Campus, The University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom;The Centre for Research and Technology, Hellas, Greece
Abstract:Achieving a complete understanding of cellular signal transduction requires deciphering the relation between structural and biochemical features of a signaling system and the shape of the signal-response relationship it embeds. Using explicit analytical expressions and numerical simulations, we present here this relation for four-layered phosphorelays, which are signaling systems that are ubiquitous in prokaryotes and also found in lower eukaryotes and plants. We derive an analytical expression that relates the shape of the signal-response relationship in a relay to the kinetic rates of forward, reverse phosphorylation and hydrolysis reactions. This reveals a set of mathematical conditions which, when satisfied, dictate the shape of the signal-response relationship. We find that a specific topology also observed in nature can satisfy these conditions in such a way to allow plasticity among hyperbolic and sigmoidal signal-response relationships. Particularly, the shape of the signal-response relationship of this relay topology can be tuned by altering kinetic rates and total protein levels at different parts of the relay. These findings provide an important step towards predicting response dynamics of phosphorelays, and the nature of subsequent physiological responses that they mediate, solely from topological features and few composite measurements; measuring the ratio of reverse and forward phosphorylation rate constants could be sufficient to determine the shape of the signal-response relationship the relay exhibits. Furthermore, they highlight the potential ways in which selective pressures on signal processing could have played a role in the evolution of the observed structural and biochemical characteristic in phosphorelays.
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