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A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles

Formation, degradation and renewal of cellular organelles is a dynamic process based on permanent budding, fusion and inter-organelle traffic of vesicles. These processes include many regulatory proteins such as SNAREs, Rabs and coats. Given this complex machinery, a controversially debated issue is...

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Autores principales: Binder, Bernd, Goede, Andrean, Berndt, Nikolaus, Holzhütter, Hermann-Georg
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2795802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20041124
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008295
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author Binder, Bernd
Goede, Andrean
Berndt, Nikolaus
Holzhütter, Hermann-Georg
author_facet Binder, Bernd
Goede, Andrean
Berndt, Nikolaus
Holzhütter, Hermann-Georg
author_sort Binder, Bernd
collection PubMed
description Formation, degradation and renewal of cellular organelles is a dynamic process based on permanent budding, fusion and inter-organelle traffic of vesicles. These processes include many regulatory proteins such as SNAREs, Rabs and coats. Given this complex machinery, a controversially debated issue is the definition of a minimal set of generic mechanisms necessary to enable the self-organization of organelles differing in number, size and chemical composition. We present a conceptual mathematical model of dynamic organelle formation based on interacting vesicles which carry different types of fusogenic proteins (FP) playing the role of characteristic marker proteins. Our simulations (ODEs) show that a de novo formation of non-identical organelles, each accumulating a different type of FP, requires a certain degree of disproportionation of FPs during budding. More importantly however, the fusion kinetics must indispensably exhibit positive cooperativity among these FPs, particularly for the formation of larger organelles. We compared different types of cooperativity: sequential alignment of corresponding FPs on opposite vesicle/organelles during fusion and pre-formation of FP-aggregates (equivalent, e.g., to SNARE clusters) prior to fusion described by Hill kinetics. This showed that the average organelle size in the system is much more sensitive to the disproportionation strength of FPs during budding if the vesicular transport system gets along with a fusion mechanism based on sequential alignments of FPs. Therefore, pre-formation of FP aggregates within the membranes prior to fusion introduce robustness with respect to organelle size. Our findings provide a plausible explanation for the evolution of a relatively large number of molecules to confer specificity on the fusion machinery compared to the relatively small number involved in the budding process. Moreover, we could speculate that a specific cooperativity which may be described by Hill kinetics (aggregates or Rab/SNARE complex formation) is suitable if maturation/identity switching of organelles play a role (bistability).
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spelling pubmed-27958022009-12-30 A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles Binder, Bernd Goede, Andrean Berndt, Nikolaus Holzhütter, Hermann-Georg PLoS One Research Article Formation, degradation and renewal of cellular organelles is a dynamic process based on permanent budding, fusion and inter-organelle traffic of vesicles. These processes include many regulatory proteins such as SNAREs, Rabs and coats. Given this complex machinery, a controversially debated issue is the definition of a minimal set of generic mechanisms necessary to enable the self-organization of organelles differing in number, size and chemical composition. We present a conceptual mathematical model of dynamic organelle formation based on interacting vesicles which carry different types of fusogenic proteins (FP) playing the role of characteristic marker proteins. Our simulations (ODEs) show that a de novo formation of non-identical organelles, each accumulating a different type of FP, requires a certain degree of disproportionation of FPs during budding. More importantly however, the fusion kinetics must indispensably exhibit positive cooperativity among these FPs, particularly for the formation of larger organelles. We compared different types of cooperativity: sequential alignment of corresponding FPs on opposite vesicle/organelles during fusion and pre-formation of FP-aggregates (equivalent, e.g., to SNARE clusters) prior to fusion described by Hill kinetics. This showed that the average organelle size in the system is much more sensitive to the disproportionation strength of FPs during budding if the vesicular transport system gets along with a fusion mechanism based on sequential alignments of FPs. Therefore, pre-formation of FP aggregates within the membranes prior to fusion introduce robustness with respect to organelle size. Our findings provide a plausible explanation for the evolution of a relatively large number of molecules to confer specificity on the fusion machinery compared to the relatively small number involved in the budding process. Moreover, we could speculate that a specific cooperativity which may be described by Hill kinetics (aggregates or Rab/SNARE complex formation) is suitable if maturation/identity switching of organelles play a role (bistability). Public Library of Science 2009-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2795802/ /pubmed/20041124 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008295 Text en Binder et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Binder, Bernd
Goede, Andrean
Berndt, Nikolaus
Holzhütter, Hermann-Georg
A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title_full A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title_fullStr A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title_full_unstemmed A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title_short A Conceptual Mathematical Model of the Dynamic Self-Organisation of Distinct Cellular Organelles
title_sort conceptual mathematical model of the dynamic self-organisation of distinct cellular organelles
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2795802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20041124
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008295
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