Key Role of Local Regulation in Chemosensing Revealed by a New Molecular Interaction-Based Modeling Method
Figure 4
Comparison of the Simulated Activities of PI3K, Membrane-Bound PTEN, and the Resulting Behavior of PIP3 (Composite Screenshot)
Stimulation of a cell in a 2:1 cAMP gradient (mean concentration 500 nmol) leads to a rapid 3-fold increase in the membrane proximal activity of PI3K (green) and to a loss of membrane-bound PTEN (blue; tracked as GFP-PTEN in real cells). This results in a rapid accumulation of PIP3 (red; reported by the location of PH-GFP in real cells). Subsequently, the PI3K activity is strongly quenched by the recruitment of regulatory components to the membrane and falls below its prestimulus level in less than 20 s. PTEN returns more slowly to the membrane. During the phase of downregulation of PI3K activity and reattachment of PTEN to the membrane, the concentration of PIP3 decays. In the front of the cell (which experiences a high cAMP concentration), membrane-associated PTEN only returns to a fraction of its prestimulus level and then enters a second phase of decline. After approximately 50 s, the low level of membrane-bound PTEN that is reached in the front of the cell allows PIP3 to increase again, even though the amount of active PI3K in this region is modest. In the back of the cell (low cAMP concentration), membrane-bound PTEN increases beyond its prestimulus level, resulting in a decrease of PIP3 below its resting state concentration. The circular inset shows a two-dimensional representation of the dynamics of membrane-bound PTEN and PIP3 in different regions of the three-dimensional simulation of a cell.