Manuscript: Theoretical and experimental analysis links isoform-specific ERK signalling to cell fate decisions.

Theoretical and experimental analysis links isoform-specific ERK signalling to cell fate decisions.

  • Marcel Schilling
  • Tim Maiwald
  • Stefan Hengl
  • Dominic Winter
  • Clemens Kreutz
  • Walter Kolch
  • Wolf D Lehmann
  • Jens Timmer
  • Ursula Klingmüller
Mol. Syst. Biol. 2009; 5 : 334
Abstract
Cell fate decisions are regulated by the coordinated activation of signalling pathways such as the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) cascade, but contributions of individual kinase isoforms are mostly unknown. By combining quantitative data from erythropoietin-induced pathway activation in primary erythroid progenitor (colony-forming unit erythroid stage, CFU-E) cells with mathematical modelling, we predicted and experimentally confirmed a distributive ERK phosphorylation mechanism in CFU-E cells. Model analysis showed bow-tie-shaped signal processing and inherently transient signalling for cytokine-induced ERK signalling. Sensitivity analysis predicted that, through a feedback-mediated process, increasing one ERK isoform reduces activation of the other isoform, which was verified by protein over-expression. We calculated ERK activation for biochemically not addressable but physiologically relevant ligand concentrations showing that double-phosphorylated ERK1 attenuates proliferation beyond a certain activation level, whereas activated ERK2 enhances proliferation with saturation kinetics. Thus, we provide a quantitative link between earlier unobservable signalling dynamics and cell fate decisions.
Model Organism Tissue Process type
schilling1 Mus musculus ERK