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A homeostatic model of IkappaB metabolism to control constitutive NF-kappaB activity.


ABSTRACT: Cellular signal transduction pathways are usually studied following administration of an external stimulus. However, disease-associated aberrant activity of the pathway is often due to misregulation of the equilibrium state. The transcription factor NF-kappaB is typically described as being held inactive in the cytoplasm by binding its inhibitor, IkappaB, until an external stimulus triggers IkappaB degradation through an IkappaB kinase-dependent degradation pathway. Combining genetic, biochemical, and computational tools, we investigate steady-state regulation of the NF-kappaB signaling module and its impact on stimulus responsiveness. We present newly measured in vivo degradation rate constants for NF-kappaB-bound and -unbound IkappaB proteins that are critical for accurate computational predictions of steady-state IkappaB protein levels and basal NF-kappaB activity. Simulations reveal a homeostatic NF-kappaB signaling module in which differential degradation rates of free and bound pools of IkappaB represent a novel cross-regulation mechanism that imparts functional robustness to the signaling module.

SUBMITTER: O'Dea EL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2673708 | biostudies-literature | 2007

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A homeostatic model of IkappaB metabolism to control constitutive NF-kappaB activity.

O'Dea Ellen L EL   Barken Derren D   Peralta Raechel Q RQ   Tran Kim T KT   Werner Shannon L SL   Kearns Jeffrey D JD   Levchenko Andre A   Hoffmann Alexander A  

Molecular systems biology 20070508


Cellular signal transduction pathways are usually studied following administration of an external stimulus. However, disease-associated aberrant activity of the pathway is often due to misregulation of the equilibrium state. The transcription factor NF-kappaB is typically described as being held inactive in the cytoplasm by binding its inhibitor, IkappaB, until an external stimulus triggers IkappaB degradation through an IkappaB kinase-dependent degradation pathway. Combining genetic, biochemica  ...[more]

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2007-10-29 | GSE8487 | GEO