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Modeling the START transition in the budding yeast cell cycle

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START-BYCC

Modeling the START transition in the budding yeast cell cycle

Authors

Janani Ravi*, Kewalin Samart, Jason Zwolak.
*Corresponding author: [email protected].

Abstract

Budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is widely used as a model organism to study the genetics underlying eukaryotic cellular processes and growth critical to cancer development, such as cell division and cell cycle progression. The budding yeast cell cycle is also one of the best-studied dynamical systems owing to its thoroughly resolved genetics. However, the dynamics underlying the crucial cell cycle decision point called the START transition, at which the cell commits to a new round of DNA replication and cell division, are under-studied. The START machinery involves a central cyclin-dependent kinase; cyclins responsible for starting the transition, bud formation, and initiating DNA synthesis; and their transcriptional regulators. However, evidence has shown that the mechanism is more complicated than a simple irreversible transition switch. Activating a key transcription regulator SBF requires the phosphorylation of its inhibitor, Whi5, or an SBF/MBF monomeric component, Swi6, but not necessarily both. Also, the timing and mechanism of the inhibitor Whi5’s nuclear export, while important, are not critical for the timing and execution of START. Therefore, there is a need for a consolidated model for the budding yeast START transition, reconciling regulatory and spatial dynamics. We built a detailed mathematical model (START-BYCC) for the START transition in the budding yeast cell cycle based on established molecular interactions and experimental phenotypes. START-BYCC recapitulates the underlying dynamics and correctly emulates key phenotypic traits of ~150 known START mutants, including regulation of size control, localization of inhibitor/transcription factor complexes, and the nutritional effects on size control. Such a detailed mechanistic understanding of the underlying dynamics gets us closer towards deconvoluting the aberrant cellular development in cancer. All wildtype and mutant simulations of our START-BYCC model are available at sbmlsimulator.org/simulator/by-start and the supporting data is available on GitHub: github.com/jravilab/start-bycc.

Data Availability and Reuse

All the simulation data and visualizations (for wildtype and 100s of mutants) are available in our interactive online simulator. The web simulator is licensed under the MIT license. Our model files containing the differential equation model and parameters are available via GitHub.

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