4.8 Article

Oscillatory stress stimulation uncovers an Achilles' heel of the yeast MAPK signaling network

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 350, Issue 6266, Pages 1379-1383

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aab0892

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM55040, R01 GM62583, PN2 EY016546, P50 GM081879]
  2. NSF Synthetic Biology Engineering Research Center (SynBERC)
  3. HHMI
  4. MOST [2015CB910300]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31470819]
  6. Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences
  7. Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research Postdoctoral Research Award (UCSF)

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Cells must interpret environmental information that often changes over time. In our experiment, we systematically monitored the growth of yeast cells under various frequencies of oscillating osmotic stress. Growth was severely inhibited at a particular resonance frequency, at which cells show hyperactivated transcriptional stress responses. This behavior represents a sensory misperception: The cells incorrectly interpret oscillations as a staircase of ever-increasing osmolarity. The misperception results from the capacity of the osmolarity-sensing mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) network to retrigger with sequential osmotic stresses. Although this feature is critical for coping with natural challenges, such as continually increasing osmolarity, it results in a trade-off of fragility to non-natural oscillatory inputs that match the retriggering time. These findings demonstrate the value of non-natural dynamic perturbations in exposing hidden sensitivities of cellular regulatory networks.

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