Literature DB >> 15899869

Graded mitogen-activated protein kinase activity precedes switch-like c-Fos induction in mammalian cells.

Jeffrey P Mackeigan1, Leon O Murphy, Christopher A Dimitri, John Blenis.   

Abstract

The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is an evolutionarily conserved signaling module that controls important cell fate decisions in a variety of physiological contexts. During Xenopus oocyte maturation, the MAPK cascade converts an increasing progesterone stimulus into a switch-like, all-or-nothing response. While the importance of such switch-like behavior is widely discussed in the literature, it is not known whether the MAPK pathway in mammalian cells exhibits a switch-like or graded response. For this study, we used flow cytometry and immunofluorescence to generate single-cell measurements of MAPK signaling in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. In contrast to the case in Xenopus oocytes, we found that ERK activation in individual mammalian cells is not ultrasensitive and shows a graded response to changes in agonist concentration. Thus, the conserved MAPK signaling module exhibits different systems-level properties in different cellular contexts. Furthermore, the graded ERK response was converted into a more switch-like behavior at the level of immediate-early gene induction and cell cycle progression. Thus, while MAPK signaling is involved in all-or-nothing cell fate decisions for both Xenopus oocyte maturation and mammalian fibroblast proliferation, the underlying mechanisms responsible for the switch-like nature of the cellular responses are different in these two systems, with the mechanism appearing to lie downstream of the kinase cascade in mammalian fibroblasts.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15899869      PMCID: PMC1140635          DOI: 10.1128/MCB.25.11.4676-4682.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Biol        ISSN: 0270-7306            Impact factor:   4.272


  20 in total

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