4.6 Article

Information transmission from NFkB signaling dynamics to gene expression

Journal

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008011

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM117134, GM111404]

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Author summary The fidelity of signal transduction depends on the accurate encoding of ligand information in specific signaling patterns and the reliable transmission of these patterns by downstream gene expression machinery. We present an analysis of the accuracy of information transmission from signaling dynamics into gene expression in the case of the transcription factor NFkB. We show that noiseless gene expression can preserve ligand identity with minimal information loss. The addition of noise to gene expression model results in information loss, an effect that can be largely mitigated by choice of parameter values. The dynamic signal encoding paradigm suggests that information flows from the extracellular environment into specific signaling patterns (encoding) that are then read by downstream effectors to control cellular behavior. Previous work empirically quantified the information content of dynamic signaling patterns. However, whether this information can be faithfully transmitted to the gene expression level is unclear. Here we used NFkB signaling as a model to understand the accuracy of information transmission from signaling dynamics into gene expression. Using a detailed mathematical model, we simulated realistic NFkB signaling patterns with different degrees of variability. The NFkB patterns were used as an input to a simple gene expression model. Analysis of information transmission between ligand and NFkB and ligand and gene expression allows us to determine information loss in transmission between receptors to dynamic signaling patterns and between signaling dynamics to gene expression. Information loss could occur due to biochemical noise or due to a lack of specificity. We found that noise-free gene expression has very little information loss suggesting that gene expression can preserve specificity in NFkB patterns. As expected, the addition of noise to the gene expression model results in information loss. Interestingly, this effect can be mitigated by a specific choice of parameters that can substantially reduce information loss due to biochemical noise during gene expression. Overall our results show that the cellular capacity for information transmission from dynamic signaling patterns to gene expression can be high enough to preserve ligand specificity and thereby the accuracy of cellular response to environmental cues.

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