Complex biological behaviors: how multiple oscillators interact in live cells
2023-05-19
(Press-News.org)
Oscillatory dynamics in fundamental biological processes, such as circadian clocks, segmentation, and transcription factor responses, requires precise quantitative control for proper cell regulation and fate decisions.
Many biological oscillators are influenced by multiple oscillatory signals, and their behavior is understood through the framework of Arnold tongues. However, this approach simplifies the situation to a single external signal and one internal oscillator, which oversimplifies real biological systems. Our understanding of how an oscillator responds to two or more external oscillatory signals is currently insufficient.
Now, a joint research team from the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen has constructed a synthetic oscillatory system in yeast that can respond to dual oscillatory signals. By tightly integrating the experiment and mathematical modeling, the researchers have revealed the cooperative effect of multiple oscillatory signals and the unique phase regulation phenomenon associated with them. These findings suggest a novel path for controlling oscillatory dynamics in both natural and synthetic biological systems.
This work was published in Cell Systems on May 17.
In this study, the researchers modified a previously constructed synthetic oscillator in yeast to acquire a dual-response oscillator. They validated that the system could be synchronized by both periodic α-factor and ethanol, thus representing a tri-coupled oscillatory system. A mathematical model was also derived to fit the parameters and predict outcomes.
Using these methods, the researchers found that two oscillatory signals together could significantly enlarge the entrainment region, increase the ratio of synchronized cells, and delay the onset of chaos. These results suggest that the two oscillatory signals did not linearly combine, but cooperated to stabilize synchronization.
"I had not heard of such a surprising phenomenon before and it is quite interesting that it is unveiled in a biological context. Moreover, evidence for this phenomenon is provided both theoretically and experimentally, using a synthetic circuit, which is an impressive tour de force," said one of the anonymous reviewers of the paper.
Moreover, the researchers discovered that the phase difference between the two external oscillatory signals was a critical parameter for the dynamics of the internal oscillator. By tuning this phase difference, one may finetune the internal oscillation amplitude while the oscillation frequency remains constant. It is further revealed that the optimal phase difference is tightly related to the natural phase difference between the different components of the system in free-oscillating condition.
As a final validation of the phase regulation mechanism, the researchers investigated whether tuning the phase difference between oscillatory signals could affect downstream gene transcription. Despite the existence of noise, they found that gene expression level was indeed significantly affected by phase modulation, which was further linked to different amplitudes of the internal oscillator.
"Our novel synthetic cell signaling system, together with mathematical modeling, serves as a powerful platform to study such complex biological problems," said Prof. WEI Ping, co-corresponding author of the study. "The results presented here broadened our general understanding of biological coupled oscillators and emphasized the importance of a correct time pattern in biological regulation. We hope that these findings may inspire scientists from much more broad disciplines."
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2023-05-19
The short-term effects of corruption are often obvious. Numerous sources, both in Russia and in the West, consider the military's endemic corruption one of the main reasons of the logistical problems, very low troop morale, and massive casualties of the Red Army in Ukraine. In late 2016, a corruption scandal cost the first woman elected head of state in an Asian country, South Korea's Park Geun-hye, impeachment.
We can well imagine that the ongoing “Qatargate,” a political scandal raised by the suspicion ...
2023-05-19
PHILADELPHIA—Penn Medicine is launching a new community mental health hub at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania — Cedar Avenue (HUP Cedar), co-locating inpatient and outpatient psychiatric care with a new crisis response center (CRC) at the facility. The multi-year plan will put crucial psychiatric and substance use care in easy reach for West and Southwest Philadelphia residents, at a time when both mental illness and drug and alcohol dependence are surging in the city.
The project will begin with moving inpatient psychiatric and drug and alcohol detoxification units from Penn Presbyterian ...
2023-05-19
Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”), a clinical stage generative artificial intelligence (AI)-driven drug discovery company, today announced that it combined two rapidly developing technologies, quantum computing and generative AI, to explore lead candidate discovery in drug development and successfully demonstrated the potential advantages of quantum generative adversarial networks in generative chemistry.
The study, published May 13 in the American Chemical Society’s Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, a leading journal in computational modeling, was led by Insilico’s Taiwan and UAE centers which focus on pioneering ...
2023-05-19
HOUSTON – (May 19, 2023) – Researchers from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine are hoping a first-of-its-kind “glyco-immune” checkpoint inhibitor could be the key to stopping bone cancer metastasis for breast cancer survivors.
Breast cancer often migrates to other organs. As many as 40% of breast cancer survivors are diagnosed with metastatic cancer, sometimes years after their initial treatment. Bone metastasis is involved in more than two-thirds of those cases, and bone metastatic lesions are known to “seed” metastatic cancer in other organs of the body.
Rice chemist Han Xiao and Baylor biologist ...
2023-05-19
Researchers at Chalmers’ Division of Applied Acoustics have conducted a laboratory study in which test subjects took concentration tests while being exposed to background traffic noise. The subjects were asked to look at a computer screen and react to certain letters, then to assess their perceived workload afterwards. The study shows that the subjects had significantly poorer results on the performance test, and also felt that the task was more difficult to carry out, with traffic noise in the background.
“What is unique about our study is that we were able to demonstrate a decline in performance at noise levels as low as 40 dB, which ...
2023-05-19
The Johanna Spyri and Heidi archives in Zurich have been added to UNESCO's Memory of the World International Register. The decision by the Executive Board of UNESCO acknowledges the collections' universal importance. The University of Zurich will be working with both institutions to promote the academic study of the collections.
Heidi is important to Switzerland’s cultural heritage and has influenced art and popular culture around the world for more than a century. The documentary heritage ...
2023-05-19
Researchers have observed the X-ray emission of the most luminous quasar seen in the last 9 billion years of cosmic history, known as SMSS J114447.77-430859.3, or J1144 for short. The new perspective sheds light on the inner workings of quasars and how they interact with their environment. The research is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Hosted by a galaxy 9.6 billion light years away from the Earth, between the constellations of Centaurus and Hydra, J1144 is extremely powerful, shining 100,000 billion times brighter ...
2023-05-19
Sounds that we hear around us are defined physically by their frequency and amplitude. But for us, sounds have a meaning beyond those parameters: we may perceive them as pleasant or unpleasant, ominous or reassuring, and interesting and rich in information, or just noise.
One aspect that affects the emotional ‘valence’ of sounds – that is, whether we perceive them as positive, neutral, or negative – is where they come from. Most people rate looming sounds, which move towards them, as more unpleasant, potent, arousing, and intense than receding sounds, ...
2023-05-19
Burlington, VT, USA, 19 May 2023 – Limited accuracy and transparency of national greenhouse gas emission inventories are curbing climate action, especially in the agriculture and land use sector.
Inconsistent and inadequate reporting by low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs), uncertainties in reported data, and a lack of robust activity data and locally specific emission factors have been found to curb effective policy action. GHG inventories are the foundation for accounting and tracking progress toward mitigation goals and decision-makers must have access to reliable, legible, and consistent data to make informed decisions.
A review of UNFCCC country-reported agricultural ...
2023-05-19
Sensors that detect changes in atmospheric pressure due to ground shaking can also obtain data about large earthquakes and explosions that exceed the upper limit of many seismometers, according to new research.
The sensors, which detect inaudible infrasounds carried through the air, could improve tsunami warnings and other emergency responses while also lowering costs.
Research by University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute scientists shows that infrasound sensors can improve magnitude determinations. An initial ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Complex biological behaviors: how multiple oscillators interact in live cells