4.0 Article

The plasticity of TGF-β signaling

Journal

BMC SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1752-0509-5-184

Keywords

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Funding

  1. iPhD SystemsX grant

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Background: The family of TGF-beta ligands is large and its members are involved in many different signaling processes. These signaling processes strongly differ in type with TGF-beta ligands eliciting both sustained or transient responses. Members of the TGF-beta family can also act as morphogen and cellular responses would then be expected to provide a direct read-out of the extracellular ligand concentration. A number of different models have been proposed to reconcile these different behaviours. We were interested to define the set of minimal modifications that are required to change the type of signal processing in the TGF-beta signaling network. Results: To define the key aspects for signaling plasticity we focused on the core of the TGF-beta signaling network. With the help of a parameter screen we identified ranges of kinetic parameters and protein concentrations that give rise to transient, sustained, or oscillatory responses to constant stimuli, as well as those parameter ranges that enable a proportional response to time-varying ligand concentrations (as expected in the read-out of morphogens). A combination of a strong negative feedback and fast shuttling to the nucleus biases signaling to a transient rather than a sustained response, while oscillations were obtained if ligand binding to the receptor is weak and the turn-over of the I-Smad is fast. A proportional read-out required inefficient receptor activation in addition to a low affinity of receptor-ligand binding. We find that targeted modification of single parameters suffices to alter the response type. The intensity of a constant signal (i.e. the ligand concentration), on the other hand, affected only the strength but not the type of the response. Conclusions: The architecture of the TGF-beta pathway enables the observed signaling plasticity. The observed range of signaling outputs to TGF-beta ligand in different cell types and under different conditions can be explained with differences in cellular protein concentrations and with changes in effective rate constants due to cross-talk with other signaling pathways. It will be interesting to uncover the exact cellular differences as well as the details of the cross-talks in future work.

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