Author:
Marrone Juan Ignacio,Sepulchre Jacques-Alexandre,Ventura Alejandra C.
Abstract
AbstractIn this article, we consider a double phosphorylation cycle, a ubiquitous signaling component, having the ability to display bistability, a behavior strongly related to the existence of positive feedback loops. If this component is connected to other signaling elements, it very likely undergoes some sort of protein–protein interaction. In several cases, these interactions result in a non-explicit negative feedback effect, leading to interlinked positive and negative feedbacks. This combination was studied in the literature as a way to generate relaxation-type oscillations. Here, we show that the two feedbacks together ensure two types of oscillations, the relaxation-type ones and a smoother type of oscillations functioning in a very narrow range of frequencies, in such a way that outside that range, the amplitude of the oscillations is severely compromised. Even more, we show that the two feedbacks are essential for both oscillatory types to emerge, and it is their hierarchy what determines the type of oscillation at work. We used bifurcation analyses and amplitude vs. frequency curves to characterize and classify the oscillations. We also applied the same ideas to another simple model, with the goal of generalizing what we learned from signaling models. The results obtained display the wealth of oscillatory dynamics that exists in a system with a bistable module nested within a negative feedback loop, showing how to transition between different types of oscillations and other dynamical behaviors such as excitability. Our work provides a framework for the study of other oscillatory systems based on bistable modules, from simple two-component models to more complex examples like the MAPK cascade and experimental cases like cell cycle oscillators.
Funder
Argentine Agency of Research and Technology
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. Rombouts, J. & Gelens, L. Synchronizing an oscillatory medium: The speed of pacemaker-generated waves. Phys. Rev. Res. 2, 043038 (2020).
2. Tyson, J. J. Biochemical oscillations. In Computational Cell Biology. Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics (eds Fall, C. P. et al.) 230–260 (Springer, 2002).
3. Novák, B. & Tyson, J. J. Design principles of biochemical oscillators. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 9, 981–991 (2008).
4. Alon, U. An Introduction to Systems Biology: Design Principles of Biological Circuits (Chapman & Hall, 2006).
5. Gouzé, J. L. Positive and negative circuits in dynamical systems. J. Biol. Syst. 6, 11–15 (1998).
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献