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- Title
Ratiometric GPCR signaling enables directional sensing in yeast.
- Authors
Henderson, Nicholas T.; Pablo, Michael; Ghose, Debraj; Clark-Cotton, Manuella R.; Zyla, Trevin R.; Nolen, James; Elston, Timothy C.; Lew, Daniel J.
- Abstract
Accurate detection of extracellular chemical gradients is essential for many cellular behaviors. Gradient sensing is challenging for small cells, which can experience little difference in ligand concentrations on the up-gradient and down-gradient sides of the cell. Nevertheless, the tiny cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae reliably decode gradients of extracellular pheromones to find their mates. By imaging the behavior of polarity factors and pheromone receptors, we quantified the accuracy of initial polarization during mating encounters. We found that cells bias the orientation of initial polarity up-gradient, even though they have unevenly distributed receptors. Uneven receptor density means that the gradient of ligand-bound receptors does not accurately reflect the external pheromone gradient. Nevertheless, yeast cells appear to avoid being misled by responding to the fraction of occupied receptors rather than simply the concentration of ligand-bound receptors. Such ratiometric sensing also serves to amplify the gradient of active G protein. However, this process is quite error-prone, and initial errors are corrected during a subsequent indecisive phase in which polarity clusters exhibit erratic mobile behavior. Cells use surface receptors to decode spatial information from chemical gradients, but accurate decoding is hampered by small cell size and the presence of molecular noise. This study shows that yeast cells decode pheromone gradients by measuring the local ratio of bound to unbound receptors. This mechanism corrects for uneven receptor density at the surface and amplifies the gradient transmitted to downstream components.
- Subjects
CELL receptors; PHEROMONES; G proteins; CELL size; YEAST
- Publication
PLoS Biology, 2019, Vol 17, Issue 10, p1
- ISSN
1544-9173
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pbio.3000484