Leeuwen2007 - Elucidating the interactions between the adhesive and transcriptional functions of beta-catenin in normal and cancerous cells

Model Identifier
MODEL2001090001
Short description
Elucidating the interactions between the adhesive and transcriptional functions of beta-catenin in normal and cancerous cells. van Leeuwen IM1, Byrne HM, Jensen OE, King JR. Author information 1 Centre for Mathematical Medicine and Biology, Division of Applied Mathematics, School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK. pmzivl@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk Abstract Wnt signalling is involved in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes. The presence of an extracellular Wnt stimulus induces cytoplasmic stabilisation and nuclear translocation of beta-catenin, a protein that also plays an essential role in cadherin-mediated adhesion. Two main hypotheses have been proposed concerning the balance between beta-catenin's adhesive and transcriptional functions: either beta-catenin's fate is determined by competition between its binding partners, or Wnt induces folding of beta-catenin into a conformation allocated preferentially to transcription. The experimental data supporting each hypotheses remain inconclusive. In this paper we present a new mathematical model of the Wnt pathway that incorporates beta-catenin's dual function. We use this model to carry out a series of in silico experiments and compare the behaviour of systems governed by each hypothesis. Our analytical results and model simulations provide further insight into the current understanding of Wnt signalling and, in particular, reveal differences in the response of the two modes of interaction between adhesion and signalling in certain in silico settings. We also exploit our model to investigate the impact of the mutations most commonly observed in human colorectal cancer. Simulations show that the amount of functional APC required to maintain a normal phenotype increases with increasing strength of the Wnt signal, a result which illustrates that the environment can substantially influence both tumour initiation and phenotype.
Format
SBML
(L2V4)
Related Publication
-
Elucidating the interactions between the adhesive and transcriptional functions of beta-catenin in normal and cancerous cells.
- van Leeuwen IM, Byrne HM, Jensen OE, King JR
- Journal of theoretical biology , 7/ 2007 , Volume 247 , Issue 1 , pages: 77-102 , PubMed ID: 17382967
- Centre for Mathematical Medicine and Biology, Division of Applied Mathematics, School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK. pmzivl@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk
- Wnt signalling is involved in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes. The presence of an extracellular Wnt stimulus induces cytoplasmic stabilisation and nuclear translocation of beta-catenin, a protein that also plays an essential role in cadherin-mediated adhesion. Two main hypotheses have been proposed concerning the balance between beta-catenin's adhesive and transcriptional functions: either beta-catenin's fate is determined by competition between its binding partners, or Wnt induces folding of beta-catenin into a conformation allocated preferentially to transcription. The experimental data supporting each hypotheses remain inconclusive. In this paper we present a new mathematical model of the Wnt pathway that incorporates beta-catenin's dual function. We use this model to carry out a series of in silico experiments and compare the behaviour of systems governed by each hypothesis. Our analytical results and model simulations provide further insight into the current understanding of Wnt signalling and, in particular, reveal differences in the response of the two modes of interaction between adhesion and signalling in certain in silico settings. We also exploit our model to investigate the impact of the mutations most commonly observed in human colorectal cancer. Simulations show that the amount of functional APC required to maintain a normal phenotype increases with increasing strength of the Wnt signal, a result which illustrates that the environment can substantially influence both tumour initiation and phenotype.
Contributors
Submitter of the first revision: Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
Submitter of this revision: Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
Modellers: Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
Submitter of this revision: Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
Modellers: Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
Metadata information
Curation status
Non-curated
Modelling approach(es)
Tags
Connected external resources
Name | Description | Size | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
Model files |
|||
Leeuwen2007.xml | SBML L2V4 Leeuwen2007 - Elucidating the interactions between the adhesive and transcriptional functions of beta-catenin in normal and cancerous cells | 82.14 KB | Preview | Download |
Additional files |
|||
Leeuwen2007.cps | COPASI version 4.24 (Build 197) Leeuwen2007 - Elucidating the interactions between the adhesive and transcriptional functions of beta-catenin in normal and cancerous cells | 147.70 KB | Preview | Download |
- Model originally submitted by : Mohammad Umer Sharif Shohan
- Submitted: Jan 9, 2020 9:46:10 AM
- Last Modified: Jan 9, 2020 9:46:10 AM