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Mutual inhibition between PTEN and PIP3 generates bistability for polarity in motile cells

Satomi Matsuoka () and Masahiro Ueda
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Satomi Matsuoka: Laboratory for Cell Signaling Dynamics, RIKEN QBiC
Masahiro Ueda: Laboratory for Cell Signaling Dynamics, RIKEN QBiC

Nature Communications, 2018, vol. 9, issue 1, 1-15

Abstract: Abstract Phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) and PIP3 phosphatase (PTEN) are enriched mutually exclusively on the anterior and posterior membranes of eukaryotic motile cells. However, the mechanism that causes this spatial separation between the two molecules is unknown. Here we develop a method to manipulate PIP3 levels in living cells and used it to show PIP3 suppresses the membrane localization of PTEN. Single-molecule measurements of membrane-association and -dissociation kinetics and of lateral diffusion reveal that PIP3 suppresses the PTEN binding site required for stable PTEN membrane binding. Mutual inhibition between PIP3 and PTEN provides a mechanistic basis for bistability that creates a PIP3-enriched/PTEN-excluded state and a PTEN-enriched/PIP3-excluded state underlying the strict spatial separation between PIP3 and PTEN. The PTEN binding site also mediates the suppression of PTEN membrane localization in chemotactic signaling. These results illustrate that the PIP3-PTEN bistable system underlies a cell’s decision-making for directional movement irrespective of the environment.

Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06856-0

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