High density and ligand affinity confer ultrasensitive signal detection by a guanylyl cyclase chemoreceptor

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2014-08-18
Authors
Pichlo, Magdalena
Bungert-Plumke, Stefanie
Weyand, Ingo
Seifert, Reinhard
Bonigk, Wolfgang
Strunker, Timo
Kashikar, Nachiket D.
Goodwin, Normann
Muller, Astrid
Pelzer, Patric
Van, Qui
Enderlein, Jorg
Klemm, Clementine
Krause, Eberhard
Trotschel, Christian
Poetsch, Ansgar
Kremmer, Elisabeth
Kaupp, U. Benjamin
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10.1083/jcb.201402027
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Abstract
Guanylyl cyclases (GCs), which synthesize the messenger cyclic guanosine 3′,5′-monophosphate, control several sensory functions, such as phototransduction, chemosensation, and thermosensation, in many species from worms to mammals. The GC chemoreceptor in sea urchin sperm can decode chemoattractant concentrations with single-molecule sensitivity. The molecular and cellular underpinnings of such ultrasensitivity are not known for any eukaryotic chemoreceptor. In this paper, we show that an exquisitely high density of 3 × 105 GC chemoreceptors and subnanomolar ligand affinity provide a high ligand-capture efficacy and render sperm perfect absorbers. The GC activity is terminated within 150 ms by dephosphorylation steps of the receptor, which provides a means for precise control of the GC lifetime and which reduces “molecule noise.” Compared with other ultrasensitive sensory systems, the 10-fold signal amplification by the GC receptor is surprisingly low. The hallmarks of this signaling mechanism provide a blueprint for chemical sensing in small compartments, such as olfactory cilia, insect antennae, or even synaptic boutons.
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© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Journal of Cell Biology 206 (2014): 541-557, doi:10.1083/jcb.201402027.
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Journal of Cell Biology 206 (2014): 541-557
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