IFIBYNE   05513
INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA, BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y NEUROCIENCIAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Yeast GPCR signaling reflects the fraction of occupied receptors, not the number
Autor/es:
ALAN BUSH; PAULA DUNAYEVICH; ALEJANDRO COLMAN LERNER; ANDREAS CONSTANTINOU; MATÍAS BLAUSTEIN; GUSTAVO VASEN; INÉS PATOP
Revista:
MOLECULAR SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Editorial:
EMBO PRESS
Referencias:
Lugar: Heidelberg; Año: 2016 vol. 12 p. 1 - 20
ISSN:
1744-4292
Resumen:
According to receptor theory, the effect of a ligand depends on the amount of agonist?receptor complex. Therefore, changes in receptor abundance should have quantitative effects. However, the response to pheromone in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is robust (unaltered) to increases or reductions in the abundance of the G‐protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR), Ste2, responding instead to the fraction of occupied receptor. We found experimentally that this robustness originates during G‐protein activation. We developed a complete mathematical model of this step, which suggested the ability to compute fractional occupancy depends on the physical interaction between the inhibitory regulator of G‐protein signaling (RGS), Sst2, and the receptor. Accordingly, replacing Sst2 by the heterologous hsRGS4, incapable of interacting with the receptor, abolished robustness. Conversely, forcing hsRGS4:Ste2 interaction restored robustness. Taken together with other results of our work, we conclude that this GPCR pathway computes fractional occupancy because ligand‐bound GPCR?RGS complexes stimulate signaling while unoccupied complexes actively inhibit it. In eukaryotes, many RGSs bind to specific GPCRs, suggesting these complexes with opposing activities also detect fraction occupancy by a ratiometric measurement. Such complexes operate as push‐pull devices, which we have recently described.