Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant gradients into strongly localized intracellular responses. We show that the capacity of a second messenger to establish and maintain localized signals, is mainly determined by its dispersion range, lambda = rootD(m)/k(-1), which must be small compared to the cell's length. Therefore, short-living second messengers (high k(-1)) with diffusion coefficients D-m in the range of 0-5 mum(2) s(-1) are most suitable. Additional to short dispersion ranges, gradient sensing may include positive feedback mechanisms that lead to local activation and global inhibition of second-messenger production. To introduce the essential nonlinear amplification, we ...
AbstractThe ability to sense and respond to shallow gradients of extracellular signals is remarkably...
AbstractSeveral recent studies have demonstrated that eukaryotic cells, including amoeboid cells of ...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
AbstractSmall chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoat...
Many eukaryotic cells move in the direction of a chemical gradient. Several assays have been develop...
AbstractEukaryotic cells can detect shallow gradients of chemoattractants with exquisite precision a...
The phenomenon of chemotaxis — the motion of a cell in response to gradi-ents in external chemical c...
Chemotaxis, or directed motion in chemical gradients, is critical for various biological processes. ...
AbstractWe develop a mathematical model of phosphoinositide-mediated gradient sensing that can be ap...
Cells respond to a variety of secreted molecules by modifying their physiology, growth patterns, and...
Chemoattractant gradients are usually considered in terms of sources and sinks that are independent ...
Quantifying information transmission in eukaryotic gradient sensing and chemotactic response the dat...
AbstractCells have the innate ability to sense and move towards a variety of chemoattractants. We in...
The behaviors of biological systems depend on complex networks of interactions between large numbers...
AbstractThe ability to sense and respond to shallow gradients of extracellular signals is remarkably...
AbstractSeveral recent studies have demonstrated that eukaryotic cells, including amoeboid cells of ...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
AbstractSmall chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoat...
Many eukaryotic cells move in the direction of a chemical gradient. Several assays have been develop...
AbstractEukaryotic cells can detect shallow gradients of chemoattractants with exquisite precision a...
The phenomenon of chemotaxis — the motion of a cell in response to gradi-ents in external chemical c...
Chemotaxis, or directed motion in chemical gradients, is critical for various biological processes. ...
AbstractWe develop a mathematical model of phosphoinositide-mediated gradient sensing that can be ap...
Cells respond to a variety of secreted molecules by modifying their physiology, growth patterns, and...
Chemoattractant gradients are usually considered in terms of sources and sinks that are independent ...
Quantifying information transmission in eukaryotic gradient sensing and chemotactic response the dat...
AbstractCells have the innate ability to sense and move towards a variety of chemoattractants. We in...
The behaviors of biological systems depend on complex networks of interactions between large numbers...
AbstractThe ability to sense and respond to shallow gradients of extracellular signals is remarkably...
AbstractSeveral recent studies have demonstrated that eukaryotic cells, including amoeboid cells of ...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...