PLoS ONE (Sep 2009)

Sustained oscillations of NF-kappaB produce distinct genome scanning and gene expression profiles.

  • Myong-Hee Sung,
  • Luigi Salvatore,
  • Rossana De Lorenzi,
  • Anindya Indrawan,
  • Manolis Pasparakis,
  • Gordon L Hager,
  • Marco E Bianchi,
  • Alessandra Agresti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007163
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 9
p. e7163

Abstract

Read online

NF-kappaB is a prototypic stress-responsive transcription factor that acts within a complex regulatory network. The signaling dynamics of endogenous NF-kappaB in single cells remain poorly understood. To examine real time dynamics in living cells, we monitored NF-kappaB activities at multiple timescales using GFP-p65 knock-in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Oscillations in NF-kappaB were sustained in most cells, with several cycles of transient nuclear translocation after TNF-alpha stimulation. Mathematical modeling suggests that NF-kappaB oscillations are selected over other non-oscillatory dynamics by fine-tuning the relative strengths of feedback loops like IkappaBalpha. The ability of NF-kappaB to scan and interact with the genome in vivo remained remarkably constant from early to late cycles, as observed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). Perturbation of long-term NF-kappaB oscillations interfered with its short-term interaction with chromatin and balanced transcriptional output, as predicted by the mathematical model. We propose that negative feedback loops do not simply terminate signaling, but rather promote oscillations of NF-kappaB in the nucleus, and these oscillations are functionally advantageous.