In silico Modeling of Itk Activation Kinetics in Thymocytes Suggests Competing Positive and Negative IP4 Mediated Feedbacks Increase Robustness
Sayak Mukherjee, Stephanie Rigaud, Sang-Cheol Seok, Guo Fu, Agnieszka, Prochenka, Michael Dworkin, Nicholas R. J. Gascoigne, Veronica J. Vieland,, Karsten Sauer, Jayajit Das

TL;DR
This study uses computational modeling and experimental data to explore how IP4 regulates Itk activation in thymocytes, revealing a cooperative-allosteric mechanism that enhances signaling robustness.
Contribution
It introduces a MaxEnt-based modeling approach to understand Itk regulation by IP4, highlighting the role of oligomeric PH domains in TCR signaling robustness.
Findings
Oligomeric Itk PH domains are key to IP4 regulation.
MaxEnt modeling quantifies robustness of signaling circuits.
Cooperative-allosteric IP4 action increases signaling stability.
Abstract
The inositol-phosphate messenger inositol(1,3,4,5)tetrakisphosphate (IP4) is essential for thymocyte positive selection by regulating plasma-membrane association of the protein tyrosine kinase Itk downstream of the T cell receptor (TCR). IP4 can act as a soluble analog of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) membrane lipid product phosphatidylinositol(3,4,5)trisphosphate (PIP3). PIP3 recruits signaling proteins such as Itk to cellular membranes by binding to PH and other domains. In thymocytes, low-dose IP4 binding to the Itk PH domain surprisingly promoted and high-dose IP4 inhibited PIP3 binding of Itk PH domains. However, the mechanisms that underlie the regulation of membrane recruitment of Itk by IP4 and PIP3 remain unclear. The distinct Itk PH domain ability to oligomerize is consistent with a cooperative-allosteric mode of IP4 action. However, other possibilities cannot be ruled…
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