IFIBA   22255
INSTITUTO DE FISICA DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Cell-fate decisions in mating pheromone stimulated yeast. A systems biology study.
Autor/es:
ARIEL CHERNOMORETZ; LUCIANA BRUNO; PABLO BALENZUELA; RODRIGO LAJE; RODRIGO BALTANAS; ELIZABETH KENNEDY; ALEJANDRO COLMAN-LERNER
Lugar:
Montevideo, Uruguay
Reunión:
Conferencia; ISCB - Latin America 2010; 2010
Institución organizadora:
International Society for Computational Biology
Resumen:
BackgroundHaploid Saccaromyces cerevisiae cells (budding yeast) exist in two mating types (a and α), which communicate via secreted pheromones. In a cells, α-factor pheromone triggers a fate decision to switch from normal growth to mating behavior, including  induction of gene transcription and cell cycle arrest. In addition, when the cell cycle machinery commits cells to division, it blocks pheromone response. Given that the pheromone pathway and the cell cycle machinery can inhibit each other, we decided to study at the single cell level how S.cerevisiae makes the cell fate choice of dividing or preparing to mate using a combination of experimentation and modeling.Material and MethodsExperimentally, we monitored, by time-lapse fluorescent microscopy, yeast stimulated with different concentrations of α factor. We determined the appearance of morphological changes (mating projection vs budding) and measured the expression of a pheromone-inducible YFP reporter. In addition, we developed a low-dimensional mathematical model that captures the interaction between the pheromone pathway and the cell cycle. We represented the activity of the pheromone pathway with species “F” and that of the cell cycle by species “C”. F represents the overall level of activation of the signaling pathway. C represents the G1 Cdk1 complex Cdc28/Cln2. C inhibits F and F inhibits C. C negatively modulated the latter inhibition. We also included positive and negative feedbacks originating in F.ResultsAt high pheromone concentrations, cells exhibited a strong and stable pheromone response. However,we found cells that initiated pheromone response and arrested the cell cycle but, after some time, theyturned off pheromone response and resumed cell division. This behavior requireda functional Cdk1.The frequency of “switching cells” decreased as the concentration of pheromone tested increased.Our mathematical model accounts for the two coexistence of switching and non-switching cells.Identical cells (represented by a single set of parameter values) will have different behaviors whentheir initial conditions (e.g. F and C values at the time of pheromone stimulation) lie on opposite sidesof a dynamical separatrix. In this case, two cells with very similar initial conditions (similar F and C inthe model) will display nearly identical initial dynamics, yet eventually they will diverge.ConclusionsWe present a low-dimensional model that suggests a possible mechanism underlying a cell fatedecision system as the interplay between pheromone response pathway and cell cycle. In thisscenario, small variations in the key components trigger totally different responses.