A Monte Carlo study of ligand-dependent integrin signal initiation
Federico Felizzi, Dagmar Iber

TL;DR
This study uses a Monte Carlo model to analyze how ligand density influences integrin signaling, revealing mechanisms beyond avidity effects, particularly involving Src kinase auto-phosphorylation, which may be crucial for cellular responses like haptotaxis.
Contribution
The paper introduces a quantitative Monte Carlo model that explains ligand-density sensitivity in integrin signaling, emphasizing the role of Src kinase auto-phosphorylation beyond avidity effects.
Findings
Ligand density affects integrin signaling beyond avidity effects.
Src kinase auto-phosphorylation is key to ligand-dependent activation.
Model reproduces experimental ligand density sensitivity.
Abstract
Integrins are allosteric cell adhesion receptors that control many important processes, including cell migration, proliferation, and apoptosis. Ligand binding activates integrins by stabilizing an integrin conformation with separated cytoplasmic tails, thus enabling the binding of proteins that mediate cytoplasmic signaling. Experiments demonstrate a high sensitivity of integrin signaling to ligand density and this has been accounted mainly to avidity effects. Based on experimental data we have developed a quantitative Monte Carlo model for integrin signal initiation. We show that within the physiological ligand density range avidity effects cannot explain the sensitivity of cellular signaling to small changes in ligand density. Src kinases are among the first proteins to be activated, possibly by trans auto-phosphorylation. We calculate the extent of integrin and ligand clustering as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCell Adhesion Molecules Research · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Biochemical and Structural Characterization
