Author:
Sootla Aivar,Delalez Nicolas,Alexis Emmanouil,Norman Arthur,Steel Harrison,Wadhams George H.,Papachristodoulou Antonis
Abstract
AbstractWe introduce a new design framework for implementing negative feedback regulation in Synthetic Biology, which we term ‘dichotomous feedback’. Our approach is different from current methods, in that it sequesters existing fluxes in the process to be controlled, and in this way takes advantage of the process’s architecture to design the control law. This signal sequestration mechanism appears in many natural biological systems and can potentially be easier to realise than ‘molecular sequestration’ and other comparison motifs that are nowadays common in biomolecular feedback control design. The loop is closed by linking the strength of signal sequestration to the process output. Our feedback regulation mechanism is motivated by two-component signalling systems, where we introduce a second response regulator competing with the natural response regulator thus sequestering kinase activity. Here, dichotomous feedback is established by increasing the concentration of the second response regulator as the level of the output of the natural process increases. Extensive analysis demonstrates how this type of feedback shapes the signal response, attenuates intrinsic noise while increasing robustness and reducing crosstalk.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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