Abstract

A major goal of current signaling research is to develop a quantitative understanding of how receptor activation is coupled to downstream signaling events and to functional cellular responses. Here, we measure how activation of the RET receptor tyrosine kinase on mouse neuroblastoma cells by the neurotrophin artemin (ART) is quantitatively coupled to key downstream effectors. We show that the efficiency of RET coupling to ERK and Akt depends strongly on ART concentration, and it is highest at the low (∼100 pM) ART levels required for neurite outgrowth. Quantitative discrimination between ERK and Akt pathway signaling similarly is highest at this low ART concentration. Stimulation of the cells with 100 pM ART activated RET at the rate of ∼10 molecules/cell/min, leading at 5-10 min to a transient peak of ∼150 phospho-ERK (pERK) molecules and ∼50 pAkt molecules per pRET, after which time the levels of these two signaling effectors fell by 25-50% while the pRET levels continued to slowly rise. Kinetic experiments showed that signaling effectors in different pathways respond to RET activation with different lag times, such that the balance of signal flux among the different pathways evolves over time. Our results illustrate that measurements using high, super-physiological growth factor levels can be misleading about quantitative features of receptor signaling. We propose a quantitative model describing how receptor-effector coupling efficiency links signal amplification to signal sensitization between receptor and effector, thereby providing insight into design principles underlying how receptors and their associated signaling machinery decode an extracellular signal to trigger a functional cellular outcome.

Highlights

  • The RET receptor activates downstream effectors that mediate function

  • We have previously proposed a mechanism for the assembly of the multicomponent activated RET receptor complex on NB41A3-mGFR␣3 mouse neuroblastoma cells, which express RET endogenously and which we stably transfected with GDNF family receptor ␣ chain (GFR␣)3 [50]

  • Development and Calibration of Assays Measuring pRET, pERK, and pAkt—We have previously described the kinase receptor activation (KIRA) assay for measuring pRET levels induced by ART stimulation of NB41A3-mGFR␣3 mouse neuroblastoma cells [50, 55]

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Summary

Introduction

Results: Large EC50 shifts between receptor and effector dose responses show RET activates ERK and Akt most efficiently at low, functionally relevant ligand concentrations. Conclusion: Experiments at high ligand concentrations can obscure quantitative features of receptor signaling. A major goal of current signaling research is to develop a quantitative understanding of how receptor activation is coupled to downstream signaling events and to functional cellular responses. We show that the efficiency of RET coupling to ERK and Akt depends strongly on ART concentration, and it is highest at the low (ϳ100 pM) ART levels required for neurite outgrowth. Quantitative discrimination between ERK and Akt pathway signaling is highest at this low ART concentration. Our results illustrate that measurements using high, super-physiological growth factor levels can be misleading about quantitative features of receptor signaling. We propose a quantitative model describing how receptor-effector coupling efficiency links signal amplification to signal sensitization between receptor and effector, thereby providing insight into design principles underlying how receptors and their associated signaling machinery decode an extracellular signal to trigger a functional cellular outcome

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