Division of labor by dual feedback regulators controls JAK2/STAT5 signaling over broad ligand range

Julie Bachmann(German Cancer Research Center), Andreas Raue(University of Freiburg), Marcel Schilling(German Cancer Research Center), Martin Böhm(German Cancer Research Center), Clemens Kreutz(University of Freiburg), Daniel Kaschek(University of Freiburg), Hauke Busch(University of Freiburg), Norbert Gretz(Heidelberg University), Wolf D. Lehmann(German Cancer Research Center), Jens Timmer(Linköping University), Ursula Klingmüller(German Cancer Research Center)
Molecular Systems Biology
July 19, 2011
Cited by 118Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Cellular signal transduction is governed by multiple feedback mechanisms to elicit robust cellular decisions. The specific contributions of individual feedback regulators, however, remain unclear. Based on extensive time-resolved data sets in primary erythroid progenitor cells, we established a dynamic pathway model to dissect the roles of the two transcriptional negative feedback regulators of the suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) family, CIS and SOCS3, in JAK2/STAT5 signaling. Facilitated by the model, we calculated the STAT5 response for experimentally unobservable Epo concentrations and provide a quantitative link between cell survival and the integrated response of STAT5 in the nucleus. Model predictions show that the two feedbacks CIS and SOCS3 are most effective at different ligand concentration ranges due to their distinct inhibitory mechanisms. This divided function of dual feedback regulation enables control of STAT5 responses for Epo concentrations that can vary 1000-fold in vivo. Our modeling approach reveals dose-dependent feedback control as key property to regulate STAT5-mediated survival decisions over a broad range of ligand concentrations.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis