publication

Domains, motifs, and scaffolds: the role of modular interactions in the evolution and wiring of cell signaling circuits

Basics
Author name(s): 
Roby P. Bhattacharyya, Attila Reményi, Brian J. Yeh, and Wendell A. Lim
Associated Lab(s): 
Lim
Publication name: 
Annual Review of Biochemistry
Date of publication: 
2006-01-01
Publication type: 
technical journal article
Support type: 
Associated project
Full citation: 
Annu Rev Biochem. 2006;75:655-80
Abstract

Living cells display complex signal processing behaviors, many of which are mediated by networks of proteins specialized for signal transduction. Here we focus on the question of how the remarkably diverse array of eukaryotic signaling circuits may have evolved. Many of the mechanisms that connect signaling proteins into networks are highly modular: The core catalytic activity of a signaling protein is physically and functionally separable from molecular domains or motifs that determine its linkage to both inputs and outputs. This high degree of modularity may make these systems more evolvable-in principle, novel circuits, and therefore highly innovative regulatory behaviors, can arise from relatively simple genetic events such as recombination, deletion, or insertion. In support of this hypothesis, recent studies show that such modular systems can be exploited to engineer nonnatural signaling proteins and pathways with novel behavior.