Long-term dynamics of multisite phosphorylation

Author:

Rubinstein Boris Y.1,Mattingly Henry H.2,Berezhkovskii Alexander M.3,Shvartsman Stanislav Y.2

Affiliation:

1. Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Kansas City, MO 64110

2. Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics and Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

3. Mathematical and Statistical Computing Laboratory, Division of Computational Bioscience, Center for Information Technology, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892

Abstract

Multisite phosphorylation cycles are ubiquitous in cell regulation systems and are studied at multiple levels of complexity, from molecules to organisms, with the ultimate goal of establishing predictive understanding of the effects of genetic and pharmacological perturbations of protein phosphorylation in vivo. Achieving this goal is essentially impossible without mathematical models, which provide a systematic framework for exploring dynamic interactions of multiple network components. Most of the models studied to date do not discriminate between the distinct partially phosphorylated forms and focus on two limiting reaction regimes, distributive and processive, which differ in the number of enzyme–substrate binding events needed for complete phosphorylation or dephosphorylation. Here we use a minimal model of extracellular signal-related kinase regulation to explore the dynamics of a reaction network that includes all essential phosphorylation forms and arbitrary levels of reaction processivity. In addition to bistability, which has been studied extensively in distributive mechanisms, this network can generate periodic oscillations. Both bistability and oscillations can be realized at high levels of reaction processivity. Our work provides a general framework for systematic analysis of dynamics in multisite phosphorylation systems.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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