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Biophysical clocks face a trade-off between internal and external noise resistance.


ABSTRACT: Many organisms use free running circadian clocks to anticipate the day night cycle. However, others organisms use simple stimulus-response strategies ('hourglass clocks') and it is not clear when such strategies are sufficient or even preferable to free running clocks. Here, we find that free running clocks, such as those found in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus and humans, can efficiently project out light intensity fluctuations due to weather patterns ('external noise') by exploiting their limit cycle attractor. However, such limit cycles are necessarily vulnerable to 'internal noise'. Hence, at sufficiently high internal noise, point attractor-based 'hourglass' clocks, such as those found in a smaller cyanobacterium with low protein copy number, Prochlorococcus marinus, can outperform free running clocks. By interpolating between these two regimes in a diverse range of oscillators drawn from across biology, we demonstrate biochemical clock architectures that are best suited to different relative strengths of external and internal noise.

SUBMITTER: Pittayakanchit W 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6059770 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Biophysical clocks face a trade-off between internal and external noise resistance.

Pittayakanchit Weerapat W   Lu Zhiyue Z   Chew Justin J   Rust Michael J MJ   Murugan Arvind A  

eLife 20180710


Many organisms use free running circadian clocks to anticipate the day night cycle. However, others organisms use simple stimulus-response strategies ('hourglass clocks') and it is not clear when such strategies are sufficient or even preferable to free running clocks. Here, we find that free running clocks, such as those found in the cyanobacterium <i>Synechococcus elongatus</i> and humans, can efficiently project out light intensity fluctuations due to weather patterns ('external noise') by ex  ...[more]

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