Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2176394 Developmental Cell 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Yeast pheromone sensors concentrate at the polarity site during gradient tracking•The polarity site is mobile, but high pheromone levels restrict its mobility•G proteins polarize independent of receptor•Localized pheromone sensing enables tracking of pheromone gradients

SummaryYeast cells track gradients of pheromones to locate mating partners. Intuition suggests that uniform distribution of pheromone receptors over the cell surface would yield optimal gradient sensing. However, yeast cells display polarized receptors. The benefit of such polarization was unknown. During gradient tracking, cell growth is directed by a patch of polarity regulators that wanders around the cortex. Patch movement is sensitive to pheromone dose, with wandering reduced on the up-gradient side of the cell, resulting in net growth in that direction. Mathematical modeling suggests that active receptors and associated G proteins lag behind the polarity patch and act as an effective drag on patch movement. In vivo, the polarity patch is trailed by a G protein-rich domain, and this polarized distribution of G proteins is required to constrain patch wandering. Our findings explain why G protein polarization is beneficial and illuminate a novel mechanism for gradient tracking.

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