Emergent memory in cell signaling: Persistent adaptive dynamics in cascades can arise from the diversity of relaxation time-scales
Tanmay Mitra, Shakti N. Menon, Sitabhra Sinha

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the MAPK signaling cascade exhibits persistent adaptive dynamics and memory effects due to diverse relaxation time-scales, even without feedback, highlighting its role in cellular information processing.
Contribution
It reveals that transient adaptive responses and memory in MAPK cascades arise from relaxation time-scale diversity, not feedback mechanisms, expanding understanding of cellular signaling.
Findings
Long-lived modulations in response to stimuli
Reverberations with repeated spiking after stimulus removal
Memory persists without feedback mechanisms
Abstract
The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascade, an evolutionarily conserved motif present in all eukaryotic cells, is involved in coordinating critical cell-fate decisions, regulating protein synthesis, and mediating learning and memory. While the steady-state behavior of the pathway stimulated by a time-invariant signal is relatively well-understood, we show using a computational model that it exhibits a rich repertoire of transient adaptive responses to changes in stimuli. When the signal is switched on, the response is characterized by long-lived modulations in frequency as well as amplitude. On withdrawing the stimulus, the activity decays over timescales much longer than that of phosphorylation-dephosphorylation processes, exhibiting reverberations characterized by repeated spiking in the activated MAPK concentration. The long-term persistence of such post-stimulus…
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