AbstractEukaryotic cells can detect shallow gradients of chemoattractants with exquisite precision and respond quickly to changes in the gradient steepness and direction. Here, we describe a set of models explaining both adaptation to uniform increases in chemoattractant and persistent signaling in response to gradients. We demonstrate that one of these models can be mapped directly onto the biochemical signal-transduction pathways underlying gradient sensing in amoebae and neutrophils. According to this scheme, a locally acting activator (PI3-kinase) and a globally acting inactivator (PTEN or a similar phosphatase) are coordinately controlled by the G-protein activation. This signaling system adapts perfectly to spatially homogeneous chang...
AbstractNeutrophils have a remarkable ability to detect the direction of chemoattractant gradients a...
Many eukaryotic cell types share the ability to migrate directionally in response to external chemoa...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...
AbstractEukaryotic cells can detect shallow gradients of chemoattractants with exquisite precision a...
AbstractWe develop a mathematical model of phosphoinositide-mediated gradient sensing that can be ap...
The phenomenon of chemotaxis — the motion of a cell in response to gradi-ents in external chemical c...
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...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
AbstractSmall chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoat...
AbstractCells have the innate ability to sense and move towards a variety of chemoattractants. We in...
Quantifying information transmission in eukaryotic gradient sensing and chemotactic response the dat...
AbstractChemotaxing cells, such as Dictyostelium and mammalian neutrophils, sense shallow chemoattra...
The behaviors of biological systems depend on complex networks of interactions between large numbers...
ABSTRACTThe signaling apparatus mediating bacterial chemotaxis can adapt to a wide range of persiste...
AbstractNeutrophils have a remarkable ability to detect the direction of chemoattractant gradients a...
Many eukaryotic cell types share the ability to migrate directionally in response to external chemoa...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...
AbstractEukaryotic cells can detect shallow gradients of chemoattractants with exquisite precision a...
AbstractWe develop a mathematical model of phosphoinositide-mediated gradient sensing that can be ap...
The phenomenon of chemotaxis — the motion of a cell in response to gradi-ents in external chemical c...
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...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
AbstractSmall chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoat...
AbstractCells have the innate ability to sense and move towards a variety of chemoattractants. We in...
Quantifying information transmission in eukaryotic gradient sensing and chemotactic response the dat...
AbstractChemotaxing cells, such as Dictyostelium and mammalian neutrophils, sense shallow chemoattra...
The behaviors of biological systems depend on complex networks of interactions between large numbers...
ABSTRACTThe signaling apparatus mediating bacterial chemotaxis can adapt to a wide range of persiste...
AbstractNeutrophils have a remarkable ability to detect the direction of chemoattractant gradients a...
Many eukaryotic cell types share the ability to migrate directionally in response to external chemoa...
The ability to detect a chemical gradient is fundamental to many cellular processes. In multicellula...