Quantifying nonequilibrium dynamics and thermodynamics of cell fate decision making in yeast under pheromone induction

Author:

Li Sheng12ORCID,Liu Qiong2,Wang Erkang12,Wang Jin3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Chemistry, Jilin University 1 , Changchun, Jilin 130012, China

2. State Key Laboratory of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2 , Changchun, Jilin 130022, China

3. Department of Chemistry and of Physics and astronomy, State University of New York at Stony Brook 3 , Stony Brook, New York 11794-3400, USA

Abstract

Cellular responses to pheromone in yeast can range from gene expression to morphological and physiological changes. While signaling pathways are well studied, the cell fate decision-making during cellular polar growth is still unclear. Quantifying these cellular behaviors and revealing the underlying physical mechanism remain a significant challenge. Here, we employed a hidden Markov chain model to quantify the dynamics of cellular morphological systems based on our experimentally observed time series. The resulting statistics generated a stability landscape for state attractors. By quantifying rotational fluxes as the non-equilibrium driving force that tends to disrupt the current attractor state, the dynamical origin of non-equilibrium phase transition from four cell morphological fates to a single dominant fate was identified. We revealed that higher chemical voltage differences induced by a high dose of pheromone resulted in higher chemical currents, which will trigger a greater net input and, thus, more degrees of the detailed balance breaking. By quantifying the thermodynamic cost of maintaining morphological state stability, we demonstrated that the flux-related entropy production rate provides a thermodynamic origin for the phase transition in non-equilibrium morphologies. Furthermore, we confirmed that the time irreversibility in time series provides a practical way to predict the non-equilibrium phase transition.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

General Medicine

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