Abstract

Eph receptor signaling plays key roles in vertebrate tissue boundary formation, axonal pathfinding, and stem cell regeneration by steering cells to positions defined by its ligand ephrin. Some of the key events in Eph-ephrin signaling are understood: ephrin binding triggers the clustering of the Eph receptor, fostering transphosphorylation and signal transduction into the cell. However, a quantitative and mechanistic understanding of how the signal is processed by the recipient cell into precise and proportional responses is largely lacking. Studying Eph activation kinetics requires spatiotemporal data on the number and distribution of receptor oligomers, which is beyond the quantitative power offered by prevalent imaging methods. Here we describe an enhanced fluorescence fluctuation imaging analysis, which employs statistical resampling to measure the Eph receptor aggregation distribution within each pixel of an image. By performing this analysis over time courses extending tens of minutes, the information-rich 4D space (x, y, oligomerization, time) results were coupled to straightforward biophysical models of protein aggregation. This analysis reveals that Eph clustering can be explained by the combined contribution of polymerization of receptors into clusters, followed by their condensation into far larger aggregates. The modeling reveals that these two competing oligomerization mechanisms play distinct roles: polymerization mediates the activation of the receptor by assembling monomers into 6- to 8-mer oligomers; condensation of the preassembled oligomers into large clusters containing hundreds of monomers dampens the signaling. We propose that the polymerization-condensation dynamics creates mechanistic explanation for how cells properly respond to variable ligand concentrations and gradients.

Highlights

  • We propose that the polymerization–condensation dynamics creates mechanistic explanation for how cells properly respond to variable ligand concentrations and gradients

  • Because Eph receptor aggregation requires minutes, we bridge this temporal gap by extending the enhanced N&B (eN&B) analysis over time [19, 20] (Fig. 1D), measuring the oligomerization dynamics of proteins in each pixel for the full time-course of each cell’s response

  • The informationrich 4D space (x, y, oligomer distribution, time) offered by eN&B can be related to Eph receptor activation by closely coupling analysis with mathematical modeling (Fig. 1 F and G)

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Summary

Introduction

We describe an enhanced fluorescence fluctuation imaging analysis, which employs statistical resampling to measure the Eph receptor aggregation distribution within each pixel of an image By performing this analysis over time courses extending tens of minutes, the information-rich 4D space (x, y, oligomerization, time) results were coupled to straightforward biophysical models of protein aggregation. Despite ample evidence for the precision of this signaling system in controlling cell patterning and positioning, the mechanism(s) by which different ephrin concentrations are interpreted by the Eph receptor into proportional responses is largely unknown. Receptor aggregation has been interpreted as an “amplifier” that operates on the ligand signal and increases the receptor sensitivity for low ligand concentrations [3, 14] It is unclear how such simple signaling scheme, lacking an adaptation mechanism beyond endocytosis, offer the cell the ability to sense and transduce changes in ligand concentrations or gradients of ligands [15].

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