242 research outputs found
Cellular signaling networks function as generalized Wiener-Kolmogorov filters to suppress noise
Cellular signaling involves the transmission of environmental information
through cascades of stochastic biochemical reactions, inevitably introducing
noise that compromises signal fidelity. Each stage of the cascade often takes
the form of a kinase-phosphatase push-pull network, a basic unit of signaling
pathways whose malfunction is linked with a host of cancers. We show this
ubiquitous enzymatic network motif effectively behaves as a Wiener-Kolmogorov
(WK) optimal noise filter. Using concepts from umbral calculus, we generalize
the linear WK theory, originally introduced in the context of communication and
control engineering, to take nonlinear signal transduction and discrete
molecule populations into account. This allows us to derive rigorous
constraints for efficient noise reduction in this biochemical system. Our
mathematical formalism yields bounds on filter performance in cases important
to cellular function---like ultrasensitive response to stimuli. We highlight
features of the system relevant for optimizing filter efficiency, encoded in a
single, measurable, dimensionless parameter. Our theory, which describes noise
control in a large class of signal transduction networks, is also useful both
for the design of synthetic biochemical signaling pathways, and the
manipulation of pathways through experimental probes like oscillatory input.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Anisotropic Hydrodynamic Mean-Field Theory for Semiflexible Polymers under Tension
We introduce an anisotropic mean-field approach for the dynamics of
semiflexible polymers under intermediate tension, the force range where a chain
is partially extended but not in the asymptotic regime of a nearly straight
contour. The theory is designed to exactly reproduce the lowest order
equilibrium averages of a stretched polymer, and treats the full complexity of
the problem: the resulting dynamics include the coupled effects of long-range
hydrodynamic interactions, backbone stiffness, and large-scale polymer contour
fluctuations. Validated by Brownian hydrodynamics simulations and comparison to
optical tweezer measurements on stretched DNA, the theory is highly accurate in
the intermediate tension regime over a broad dynamical range, without the need
for additional dynamic fitting parameters.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures; revised version with additional calculations and
experimental comparison; accepted for publication in Macromolecule
Inverted Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless Singularity and High-Temperature Algebraic Order in an Ising Model on a Scale-Free Hierarchical-Lattice Small-World Network
We have obtained exact results for the Ising model on a hierarchical lattice
with a scale-free degree distribution, high clustering coefficient, and
small-world behavior. By varying the probability p of long-range bonds, the
entire spectrum from an unclustered, non-small-world network to a
highly-clustered, small-world system is studied. We obtain analytical
expressions for the degree distribution P(k) and clustering coefficient C for
all p, as well as the average path length l for p=0 and 1. The Ising model on
this network is studied through an exact renormalization-group transformation
of the quenched bond probability distribution, using up to 562,500 probability
bins to represent the distribution. For p < 0.494, we find power-law critical
behavior of the magnetization and susceptibility, with critical exponents
continuously varying with p, and exponential decay of correlations away from
T_c. For p >= 0.494, where the network exhibits small-world character, the
critical behavior radically changes: We find a highly unusual phase transition,
namely an inverted Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless singularity, between a
low-temperature phase with non-zero magnetization and finite correlation length
and a high-temperature phase with zero magnetization and infinite correlation
length. Approaching T_c from below, the magnetization and the susceptibility
respectively exhibit the singularities of exp(-C/sqrt(T_c-T)) and
exp(D/sqrt(T_c-T)), with C and D positive constants. With long-range bond
strengths decaying with distance, we see a phase transition with power-law
critical singularities for all p, an unusually narrow critical region and
important corrections to power-law behavior that depend on the exponent
characterizing the decay of long-range interactions.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures; replaced with published versio
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