The molecular mechanisms that transmit information from cell surface receptors to the nucleus are exceedingly complex; thus, much effort has been expended in developing computational models to understand these processes. A recent study on modeling the nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of Smad2-Smad4 complexes in response to transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) receptor activation has provided substantial insight into how this signaling network translates the degree of TGF-ß receptor activation (input) into the amount of nuclear Smad2-Smad4 complexes (output). The study addressed this question by combining a simple, mechanistic model with targeted experiments, an approach that proved particularly powerful for exploring the fundamental properties of a complex signaling network. The mathematical model revealed that Smad nuclear-cytoplasmic dynamics enables a proportional, but time-delayed coupling between the input and the output. As a result, the output can faithfully track gradual changes in the input, while the rapid input fluctuations that constitute signaling noise are dampened out.
Revised: March 30, 2010 |
Published: September 9, 2008
Citation
Wiley H.S., and H. Shankaran. 2008.Smad Signaling Dynamics: Insights from a Parsimonious Model.Science Signaling 1, no. 36:pe41.PNNL-SA-61962.