Ultrasensitivity in signaling cascades revisited: Linking local and global ultrasensitivity estimations

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Abstract

Ultrasensitive response motifs, capable of converting graded stimuli into binary responses, are well-conserved in signal transduction networks. Although it has been shown that a cascade arrangement of multiple ultrasensitive modules can enhance the system's ultrasensitivity, how a given combination of layers affects a cascade's ultrasensitivity remains an open question for the general case. Here, we introduce a methodology that allows us to determine the presence of sequestration effects and to quantify the relative contribution of each module to the overall cascade's ultrasensitivity. The proposed analysis framework provides a natural link between global and local ultrasensitivity descriptors and it is particularly wellsuited to characterize and understand mathematical models used to study real biological systems. As a case study, we have considered three mathematical models introduced by O'Shaughnessy et al. to study a tunable synthetic MAPK cascade, and we show how our methodology can help modelers better understand alternative models.

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Altszyler, E., Ventura, A. C., Colman-Lerner, A., & Chernomoretz, A. (2017). Ultrasensitivity in signaling cascades revisited: Linking local and global ultrasensitivity estimations. PLoS ONE, 12(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180083

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