Spatially compartmentalized phase regulation of a ca2+-camp-pka oscillatory circuit

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Abstract

Signaling networks are spatiotemporally organized to sense diverse inputs, process information, and carry out specific cellular tasks. In b cells, Ca2+, cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), and Protein Kinase A (PKA) exist in an oscillatory circuit characterized by a high degree of feedback. Here, we describe a mode of regulation within this circuit involving a spatial dependence of the relative phase between cAMP, PKA, and Ca2+. We show that in mouse MIN6 b cells, nanodomain clustering of Ca2+-sensitive adenylyl cyclases (ACs) drives oscillations of local cAMP levels to be precisely in-phase with Ca2+ oscillations, whereas Ca2+-sensitive phosphodiesterases maintain out-of-phase oscillations outside of the nanodomain. Disruption of this precise phase relationship perturbs Ca2+ oscillations, suggesting the relative phase within an oscillatory circuit can encode specific functional information. This work unveils a novel mechanism of cAMP compartmentation utilized for localized tuning of an oscillatory circuit and has broad implications for the spatiotemporal regulation of signaling networks.

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Tenner, B., Getz, M., Ross, B., Ohadi, D., Bohrer, C. H., Greenwald, E., … Zhang, J. (2020). Spatially compartmentalized phase regulation of a ca2+-camp-pka oscillatory circuit. ELife, 9, 1–34. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.55013

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