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An Endogenous Accelerator for Viral Gene Expression Confers a Fitness Advantage
Mathematical Biology| Speaker: | Leor Weinberger, UCSF |
| Location: | 1147 MSB |
| Start time: | Mon, Dec 3 2012, 2:10PM |
Description
Many signaling circuits face a fundamental tradeoff between accelerating their response
speed while maintaining final levels below a cytotoxic threshold. I will describe a transcriptional circuitry that dynamically converts signaling inputs into faster rates
without amplifying final equilibrium levels. Using time-lapse microscopy, we find that transcriptional activators accelerate
human cytomegalovirus (CMV) gene expression in single cells without amplifying steady-state
expression levels, and this acceleration generates a significant replication advantage. We map the accelerator to a highly self-cooperative transcriptional negative-feedback loop (Hill coefficient = 7) generated by homo-multimerization of the virus's essential transactivator
protein IE2 at nuclear PML
bodies. Eliminating the IE2-accelerator circuit reduces transcriptional
strength through
mislocalization of incoming viral genomes away from PML bodies and carries
a heavy fitness cost. In
general, accelerators may provide a mechanism for signal-transduction
circuits to respond quickly to
external signals without increasing steady-state levels of potentially
cytotoxic molecules.
