DocumentCode :
1392837
Title :
Evolution of gene auto-regulation in the presence of noise
Author :
Singh, Ashutosh ; Hespanha, Joao P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Chem. & Biochem., Univ. of California, La Jolla, CA, USA
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
fYear :
2009
fDate :
9/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
368
Lastpage :
378
Abstract :
Auto-regulatory negative feedback loops, where the protein expressed from a gene inhibits its own expression are common gene network motifs within cells. We investigate when will introducing a negative feedback mechanism be beneficial in terms of increasing a fitness function that is given by the probability of maintaining protein numbers above a critical threshold. Our results show the existence of a trade-off as introducing feedback decreases the average number of protein molecules driving this number closer to the critical threshold (which decreases fitness) but also reduces stochastic fluctuations around the mean (which increases fitness). We provide analytical conditions under which a negative feedback mechanism can evolve, that is, introducing feedback will increase the above fitness. Analyses of these conditions show that negative feedbacks are more likely to evolve when (i) the source of noise in the protein population is extrinsic (i.e. noise is caused by fluctuations in exogenous signals driving the gene network) and not intrinsic (i.e. the randomness associated with mRNA/protein expression and degradation); (ii) the dynamics of the exogenous signal causing extrinsic noise is slower than the protein dynamics; and (iii) the critical threshold level for the protein number is low. We also show that mRNA/protein degradation rates are critical factors in determining whether transcription or translational negative feedback should evolve. In particular, when the mRNA half-life is much shorter than the protein´s half-life, then a transcriptional negative feedback mechanism is more likely to evolve. On the other hand, a translational negative feedback mechanism is preferred with more stable mRNAs that have long half-lifes.
Keywords :
feedback; genetics; macromolecules; molecular biophysics; proteins; autoregulatory negative feedback loops; exogenous signal; extrinsic noise; fitness function; gene autoregulation; gene network motifs; mRNA/protein degradation; mRNA/protein expression; protein dynamics; stochastic fluctuations; transcription negative feedback; translational negative feedback;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Systems Biology, IET
Publisher :
iet
ISSN :
1751-8849
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1049/iet-syb.2009.0002
Filename :
5243214
Link To Document :
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