Abstract

Chemotaxis is characterized by spontaneous cellular behavior. This spontaneity results, in part, from the stochasticity of intracellular reactions. Spontaneous and random migration of chemotactic cells is regulated by spontaneously generated signals, namely transient local increases in the level of phosphoinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate (PIP3 pulses). In this study, we attempted to elucidate the mechanisms that generate these PIP3 pulses and how the pulses contribute to gradient sensing during chemotaxis. To this end, we constructed a simple biophysical model of intracellular signal transduction consisting of an inositol phospholipid signaling pathway and small GTPases. Our theoretical analysis revealed that an excitable system can emerge from the non-linear dynamics of the model, and that stochastic reactions allow the system to spontaneously become excited, which was corresponded to the PIP3 pulses. Based on these results, we framed a hypothesis of the gradient sensing; a chemical gradient spatially modifies a potential barrier for excitation and then PIP3 pulses are preferentially generated on the side of the cell exposed to the higher chemical concentration. We then validated our hypothesis using stochastic simulations of the signal transduction.

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