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Full-Text Articles in Medical Sciences

A Mathematical Model Of Glut1 Modulation In Rods And Rpe And Its Differential Impact In Cell Metabolism, Andrea Aparicio, Erika T Camacho, Nancy J. Philp, Stephen A Wirkus Jun 2022

A Mathematical Model Of Glut1 Modulation In Rods And Rpe And Its Differential Impact In Cell Metabolism, Andrea Aparicio, Erika T Camacho, Nancy J. Philp, Stephen A Wirkus

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

We present a mathematical model of key glucose metabolic pathways in two cells of the human retina: the rods and the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE). Computational simulations of glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) inhibition in the model accurately reproduce experimental data from conditional knockout mice and reveal that modification of GLUT1 expression levels of both cells differentially impacts their metabolism. We hypothesize that, under glucose scarcity, the RPE’s energy producing pathways are altered in order to preserve its functionality, impacting the photoreceptors’ outer segment renewal. On the other hand, when glucose is limited in the rods, aerobic glycolysis is preserved, which …


Emergence Of Bimodal Cell Population Responses From The Interplay Between Analog Single-Cell Signaling And Protein Expression Noise., Marc R Birtwistle, Jens Rauch, Anatoly Kiyatkin, Edita Aksamitiene, Maciej Dobrzyński, Jan B. Hoek, Walter Kolch, Babatunde A Ogunnaike, Boris N Kholodenko Jan 2012

Emergence Of Bimodal Cell Population Responses From The Interplay Between Analog Single-Cell Signaling And Protein Expression Noise., Marc R Birtwistle, Jens Rauch, Anatoly Kiyatkin, Edita Aksamitiene, Maciej Dobrzyński, Jan B. Hoek, Walter Kolch, Babatunde A Ogunnaike, Boris N Kholodenko

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: Cell-to-cell variability in protein expression can be large, and its propagation through signaling networks affects biological outcomes. Here, we apply deterministic and probabilistic models and biochemical measurements to study how network topologies and cell-to-cell protein abundance variations interact to shape signaling responses.

RESULTS: We observe bimodal distributions of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) responses to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation, which are generally thought to indicate bistable or ultrasensitive signaling behavior in single cells. Surprisingly, we find that a simple MAPK/ERK-cascade model with negative feedback that displays graded, analog ERK responses at a single cell level can explain the experimentally …


Robust Dynamic Balance Of Ap-1 Transcription Factors In A Neuronal Gene Regulatory Network., Gregory M Miller, Babatunde A Ogunnaike, James S Schwaber, Rajanikanth Vadigepalli Jan 2010

Robust Dynamic Balance Of Ap-1 Transcription Factors In A Neuronal Gene Regulatory Network., Gregory M Miller, Babatunde A Ogunnaike, James S Schwaber, Rajanikanth Vadigepalli

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: The octapeptide Angiotensin II is a key hormone that acts via its receptor AT1R in the brainstem to modulate the blood pressure control circuits and thus plays a central role in the cardiac and respiratory homeostasis. This modulation occurs via activation of a complex network of signaling proteins and transcription factors, leading to changes in levels of key genes and proteins. AT1R initiated activity in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), which regulates blood pressure, has been the subject of extensive molecular analysis. But the adaptive network interactions in the NTS response to AT1R, plausibly related to the development of …


Positional Information Generated By Spatially Distributed Signaling Cascades., Javier Muñoz-García, Zoltan Neufeld, Boris N Kholodenko Mar 2009

Positional Information Generated By Spatially Distributed Signaling Cascades., Javier Muñoz-García, Zoltan Neufeld, Boris N Kholodenko

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

The temporal and stationary behavior of protein modification cascades has been extensively studied, yet little is known about the spatial aspects of signal propagation. We have previously shown that the spatial separation of opposing enzymes, such as a kinase and a phosphatase, creates signaling activity gradients. Here we show under what conditions signals stall in the space or robustly propagate through spatially distributed signaling cascades. Robust signal propagation results in activity gradients with long plateaus, which abruptly decay at successive spatial locations. We derive an approximate analytical solution that relates the maximal amplitude and propagation length of each activation profile …


A New Model For Hemoglobin Ingestion And Transport By The Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium Falciparum., Michelle D Lazarus, Timothy G Schneider, Theodore F Taraschi Jun 2008

A New Model For Hemoglobin Ingestion And Transport By The Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium Falciparum., Michelle D Lazarus, Timothy G Schneider, Theodore F Taraschi

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

The current model for hemoglobin ingestion and transport by intraerythrocytic Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites shares similarities with endocytosis. However, the model is largely hypothetical, and the mechanisms responsible for the ingestion and transport of host cell hemoglobin to the lysosome-like food vacuole (FV) of the parasite are poorly understood. Because actin dynamics play key roles in vesicle formation and transport in endocytosis, we used the actin-perturbing agents jasplakinolide and cytochalasin D to investigate the role of parasite actin in hemoglobin ingestion and transport to the FV. In addition, we tested the current hemoglobin trafficking model through extensive analysis of serial …


Transcriptional Regulatory Network Analysis During Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transformation Of Retinal Pigment Epithelium., Craig H Pratt, Rajanikanth Vadigepalli, Praveen Chakravarthula, Gregory E Gonye, Nancy J Philp, Gerald B Grunwald Jan 2008

Transcriptional Regulatory Network Analysis During Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transformation Of Retinal Pigment Epithelium., Craig H Pratt, Rajanikanth Vadigepalli, Praveen Chakravarthula, Gregory E Gonye, Nancy J Philp, Gerald B Grunwald

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: Phenotypic transformation of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells contributes to the onset and progression of ocular proliferative disorders such as proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR). The formation of epiretinal membranes in PVR may involve an epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT) of RPE cells as part of an aberrant wound healing response. While the underlying mechanism remains unclear, this likely involves changes in RPE cell gene expression under the control of specific transcription factors (TFs). Thus, the purpose of the present study was to identify TFs that may play a role in this process.

METHODS: Regulatory regions of genes that are differentially regulated during …


A Domain-Oriented Approach To The Reduction Of Combinatorial Complexity In Signal Transduction Networks, Holger Conzelmann, Julio Saez-Rodriguez, Thomas Sauter, Boris N. Kholodenko Phd, Dsci, Ernst D. Gilles Jan 2006

A Domain-Oriented Approach To The Reduction Of Combinatorial Complexity In Signal Transduction Networks, Holger Conzelmann, Julio Saez-Rodriguez, Thomas Sauter, Boris N. Kholodenko Phd, Dsci, Ernst D. Gilles

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

Background:

Receptors and scaffold proteins possess a number of distinct domains and bind multiple partners. A common problem in modeling signaling systems arises from a combinatorial explosion of different states generated by feasible molecular species. The number of possible species grows exponentially with the number of different docking sites and can easily reach several millions. Models accounting for this combinatorial variety become impractical for many applications.

Results:

Our results show that under realistic assumptions on domain interactions, the dynamics of signaling pathways can be exactly described by reduced, hierarchically structured models. The method presented here provides a rigorous way to …


Signaling Switches And Bistability Arising From Multisite Phosphorylation In Protein Kinase Cascades., Nick I Markevich, Jan B. Hoek, Boris N. Kholodenko Feb 2004

Signaling Switches And Bistability Arising From Multisite Phosphorylation In Protein Kinase Cascades., Nick I Markevich, Jan B. Hoek, Boris N. Kholodenko

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades can operate as bistable switches residing in either of two different stable states. MAPK cascades are often embedded in positive feedback loops, which are considered to be a prerequisite for bistable behavior. Here we demonstrate that in the absence of any imposed feedback regulation, bistability and hysteresis can arise solely from a distributive kinetic mechanism of the two-site MAPK phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Importantly, the reported kinetic properties of the kinase (MEK) and phosphatase (MKP3) of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) fulfill the essential requirements for generating a bistable switch at a single MAPK cascade level. Likewise, …