Covalent modification cycles are ubiquitous. Theoretical studies have suggested that they serve to increase sensitivity. However, this suggestion has not been corroborated experimentally in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that the assumptions of the theoretical studies, i.e., irreversibility and absence of product inhibition, were not trivial: when the conversion reactions are close to equilibrium or saturated by their product, "zero-order" ultrasensitivity disappears. For high sensitivities to arise, not only substrate saturation (zero-order) but also high equilibrium constants and low product saturation are required. Many covalent modification cycles are catalyzed by one bifunctional 'ambiguous' enzyme rather than by two independent proteins. ...
Biological signal transduction commonly involves cooperative interactions in the binding of ligands ...
The yeast pheromone response pathway is a canonical three-step mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP...
AbstractCovalent modification cycles (e.g., phosphorylation-dephosphorylation) underlie most cellula...
AbstractRegulation by covalent modification is a common mechanism to transmit signals in biological ...
<div><p>Two-component signal transduction systems, where the phosphorylation state of a regulator pr...
Signal amplification in biomolecular networks converts a linear input to a steeply sigmoid output an...
We used a model system of purified components to explore the effects of a downstream target on the s...
The building blocks of most signal transduction pathways are pairs of enzymes, such as kinases and p...
Jiang et al. (Research Article, 11 October 2011, DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.2002152) used a combined exp...
Switch-like behaviours in biochemical networks are of fundamental significance in biological signal ...
AbstractCovalent modification cycles (systems in which the activity of a substrate is regulated by t...
Covalent modification cycles (CMCs) are basic units of signaling systems and their properties are we...
<div><p>Cellular signaling networks are subject to transcriptional and proteolytic regulation under ...
Cellular signaling networks are subject to transcriptional and proteolytic regulation under both phy...
<p>(A) Reaction scheme: A substrate molecule () undergoes reversible phosphorylation by a bifunction...
Biological signal transduction commonly involves cooperative interactions in the binding of ligands ...
The yeast pheromone response pathway is a canonical three-step mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP...
AbstractCovalent modification cycles (e.g., phosphorylation-dephosphorylation) underlie most cellula...
AbstractRegulation by covalent modification is a common mechanism to transmit signals in biological ...
<div><p>Two-component signal transduction systems, where the phosphorylation state of a regulator pr...
Signal amplification in biomolecular networks converts a linear input to a steeply sigmoid output an...
We used a model system of purified components to explore the effects of a downstream target on the s...
The building blocks of most signal transduction pathways are pairs of enzymes, such as kinases and p...
Jiang et al. (Research Article, 11 October 2011, DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.2002152) used a combined exp...
Switch-like behaviours in biochemical networks are of fundamental significance in biological signal ...
AbstractCovalent modification cycles (systems in which the activity of a substrate is regulated by t...
Covalent modification cycles (CMCs) are basic units of signaling systems and their properties are we...
<div><p>Cellular signaling networks are subject to transcriptional and proteolytic regulation under ...
Cellular signaling networks are subject to transcriptional and proteolytic regulation under both phy...
<p>(A) Reaction scheme: A substrate molecule () undergoes reversible phosphorylation by a bifunction...
Biological signal transduction commonly involves cooperative interactions in the binding of ligands ...
The yeast pheromone response pathway is a canonical three-step mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP...
AbstractCovalent modification cycles (e.g., phosphorylation-dephosphorylation) underlie most cellula...