PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Modeling and experimental analyses reveals signaling plasticity in a bi-modular assembly of CD40 receptor activated kinases.

  • Uddipan Sarma,
  • Archana Sareen,
  • Moitrayee Maiti,
  • Vanita Kamat,
  • Raki Sudan,
  • Sushmita Pahari,
  • Neetu Srivastava,
  • Somenath Roy,
  • Sitabhra Sinha,
  • Indira Ghosh,
  • Ajit G Chande,
  • Robin Mukhopadhyaya,
  • Bhaskar Saha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0039898
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e39898

Abstract

Read online

Depending on the strength of signal dose, CD40 receptor (CD40) controls ERK-1/2 and p38MAPK activation. At low signal dose, ERK-1/2 is maximally phosphorylated but p38MAPK is minimally phosphorylated; as the signal dose increases, ERK-1/2 phosphorylation is reduced whereas p38MAPK phosphorylation is reciprocally enhanced. The mechanism of reciprocal activation of these two MAPKs remains un-elucidated. Here, our computational model, coupled to experimental perturbations, shows that the observed reciprocity is a system-level behavior of an assembly of kinases arranged in two modules. Experimental perturbations with kinase inhibitors suggest that a minimum of two trans-modular negative feedback loops are required to reproduce the experimentally observed reciprocity. The bi-modular architecture of the signaling pathways endows the system with an inherent plasticity which is further expressed in the skewing of the CD40-induced productions of IL-10 and IL-12, the respective anti-inflammatory and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Targeting the plasticity of CD40 signaling significantly reduces Leishmania major infection in a susceptible mouse strain. Thus, for the first time, using CD40 signaling as a model, we show how a bi-modular assembly of kinases imposes reciprocity to a receptor signaling. The findings unravel that the signalling plasticity is inherent to a reciprocal system and that the principle can be used for designing a therapy.