Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996633 | Molecular Cell | 2011 | 10 Pages |
SummaryCellular signaling pathways exhibit complex response profiles with features such as thresholds and steep activation (i.e., ultrasensitivity). In a reconstituted mitotic spindle orientation pathway, activation of Drosophila Pins (LGN in mammals) by Gαi is ultrasensitive (apparent Hill coefficient of 3.1), such that Pins recruitment of the microtubule binding protein Mud (NuMA) occurs over a very narrow Gαi concentration range. Ultrasensitivity is required for Pins function in neuroblasts as a nonultrasensitive Pins mutant fails to robustly couple spindle position to cell polarity. Pins contains three Gαi binding GoLoco domains (GLs); Gαi binding to GL3 activates Pins, whereas GLs 1 and 2 shape the response profile. Although cooperative binding is one mechanism for generating ultrasensitivity, we find GLs 1 and 2 act as “decoys” that compete against activation at GL3. Many signaling proteins contain multiple protein interaction domains, and the decoy mechanism may be a common method for generating ultrasensitivity in regulatory pathways.
Graphical AbstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (217 K)Download as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Activation of the spindle-orienting protein Pins by Gαi is highly ultrasensitive ► Loss of ultrasensitive activation leads to erratic spindle orientation ► Ultrasensitivity occurs by “decoy” Gαi binding sites