Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2076854 Biosystems 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
Membrane receptors and proteins involved in signal transduction display numerous binding domains and operate as molecular scaffolds generating a variety of parallel reactions and protein complexes. The resulting combinatorial explosion of the number of feasible chemical species and, hence, different states of a network greatly impedes mechanistic modeling of signaling systems. Here we present novel general principles and identify kinetic requirements that allow us to replace a mechanistic picture of all possible micro-states and transitions by a macro-description of states of separate binding sites of network proteins. This domain-oriented approach dramatically reduces computational models of cellular signaling networks by dissecting mechanistic trajectories into the dynamics of macro- and meso-variables. We specify the conditions when the temporal dynamics of micro-states can be exactly or approximately expressed in terms of the product of the relative concentrations of separate domains. We prove that our macro-modeling approach equally applies to signaling systems with low population levels, analyzed by stochastic rather than deterministic equations. Thus, our results greatly facilitate quantitative analysis and computational modeling of multi-protein signaling networks.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Modelling and Simulation
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