Long signaling cascades tend to attenuate retroactivity

较长的信号级联往往会减弱逆向反应。

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Abstract

Signaling pathways consisting of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles with no explicit feedback allow signals to propagate not only from upstream to downstream but also from downstream to upstream due to retroactivity at the interconnection between phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles. However, the extent to which a downstream perturbation can propagate upstream in a signaling cascade and the parameters that affect this propagation are presently unknown. Here, we determine the downstream-to-upstream steady-state gain at each stage of the signaling cascade as a function of the cascade parameters. This gain can be made smaller than 1 (attenuation) by sufficiently fast kinase rates compared to the phosphatase rates and/or by sufficiently large Michaelis-Menten constants and sufficiently low amounts of total stage protein. Numerical studies performed on sets of biologically relevant parameters indicated that ∼50% of these parameters could give rise to amplification of the downstream perturbation at some stage in a three-stage cascade. In an n-stage cascade, the percentage of parameters that lead to an overall attenuation from the last stage to the first stage monotonically increases with the cascade length n and reaches 100% for cascades of length at least 6.

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