1. Feedbacks, Bifurcations, and Cell Fate Decision-Making in the p53 System
- Author
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Marta N. Bogdał, Beata Hat, Tomasz Lipniacki, and Marek Kochańczyk
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Bistability ,Regulator ,Gene Expression ,Apoptosis ,Biochemistry ,Biochemical Simulations ,Cell Cycle and Cell Division ,Post-Translational Modification ,Phosphorylation ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Feedback, Physiological ,Cell Death ,Ecology ,biology ,Cell biology ,Nucleic acids ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Cell Processes ,Modeling and Simulation ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction ,DNA repair ,Cell fate determination ,Models, Biological ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Negative feedback ,Limit cycle ,DNA-binding proteins ,Genetics ,Humans ,PTEN ,Gene Regulation ,Cell Cycle Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Positive feedback ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Computational Biology ,Cell Biology ,DNA ,Cell Cycle Checkpoints ,Regulatory Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,biology.protein ,DNA damage ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
The p53 transcription factor is a regulator of key cellular processes including DNA repair, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. In this theoretical study, we investigate how the complex circuitry of the p53 network allows for stochastic yet unambiguous cell fate decision-making. The proposed Markov chain model consists of the regulatory core and two subordinated bistable modules responsible for cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. The regulatory core is controlled by two negative feedback loops (regulated by Mdm2 and Wip1) responsible for oscillations, and two antagonistic positive feedback loops (regulated by phosphatases Wip1 and PTEN) responsible for bistability. By means of bifurcation analysis of the deterministic approximation we capture the recurrent solutions (i.e., steady states and limit cycles) that delineate temporal responses of the stochastic system. Direct switching from the limit-cycle oscillations to the “apoptotic” steady state is enabled by the existence of a subcritical Neimark—Sacker bifurcation in which the limit cycle loses its stability by merging with an unstable invariant torus. Our analysis provides an explanation why cancer cell lines known to have vastly diverse expression levels of Wip1 and PTEN exhibit a broad spectrum of responses to DNA damage: from a fast transition to a high level of p53 killer (a p53 phosphoform which promotes commitment to apoptosis) in cells characterized by high PTEN and low Wip1 levels to long-lasting p53 level oscillations in cells having PTEN promoter methylated (as in, e.g., MCF-7 cell line)., Author Summary Cancers are diseases of signaling networks. Transcription factor p53 is a pivotal node of a network that integrates a variety of stress signals and governs critical processes of DNA repair, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. Somewhat paradoxically, despite the fact that carcinogenesis is prevalently caused by p53 network malfunction, most of our knowledge about p53 signaling is based on cancer or immortalized cell lines. In this paper, we construct a mathematical model of intact p53 network to understand dynamics of non-cancerous cells and then dynamics of cancerous cells by introducing perturbations to the regulatory system. Cell fate decisions are enabled by the presence of interlinked feedback loops which give rise to a rich repertoire of behaviors. We explain and analyze by means of numerical simulations how the dynamical structure of the regulatory system allows for generating unambiguous single-cell fate decisions, also in the case when the cell population splits into an apoptotic and a surviving subpopulation. Perturbation analysis provides an explanation why cancer cell lines known to have vastly diverse expression levels of p53 regulators can exhibit a broad spectrum of responses to DNA damage.
- Published
- 2016
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