5,953 research outputs found
Macroscopic fluxes and local reciprocal relation in second-order stochastic processes far from equilibrium
Stochastic process is an essential tool for the investigation of the physical
and life sciences at nanoscale. In the first-order stochastic processes widely
used in chemistry and biology, only the flux of mass rather than that of heat
can be well defined. Here we investigate the two macroscopic fluxes in
second-order stochastic processes driven by position-dependent forces and
temperature gradient. We prove that the thermodynamic equilibrium defined
through the vanishing of macroscopic fluxes is equivalent to that defined via
time reversibility at mesoscopic scale. In the small noise limit, we find that
the entropy production rate, which has previously been defined by the
mesoscopic irreversible fluxes on the phase space, matches the classic
macroscopic expression as the sum of the products of macroscopic fluxes and
their associated thermodynamic forces. Further we show that the two pairs of
forces and fluxes in such a limit follow a linear phenomenonical relation and
the associated scalar coefficients always satisfy the reciprocal relation for
both transient and steady states. The scalar coefficient is proportional to the
square of local temperature divided by the local frictional coefficient and
originated from the second moment of velocity distribution along each
dimension. This result suggests the very close connection between Soret effect
(thermal diffusion) and Dufour effect at nano scale even far from equilibrium
Mesoscopic Biochemical Basis of Isogenetic Inheritance and Canalization: Stochasticity, Nonlinearity, and Emergent Landscape
Biochemical reaction systems in mesoscopic volume, under sustained
environmental chemical gradient(s), can have multiple stochastic attractors.
Two distinct mechanisms are known for their origins: () Stochastic
single-molecule events, such as gene expression, with slow gene on-off
dynamics; and () nonlinear networks with feedbacks. These two mechanisms
yield different volume dependence for the sojourn time of an attractor. As in
the classic Arrhenius theory for temperature dependent transition rates, a
landscape perspective provides a natural framework for the system's behavior.
However, due to the nonequilibrium nature of the open chemical systems, the
landscape, and the attractors it represents, are all themselves {\em emergent
properties} of complex, mesoscopic dynamics. In terms of the landscape, we show
a generalization of Kramers' approach is possible to provide a rate theory. The
emergence of attractors is a form of self-organization in the mesoscopic
system; stochastic attractors in biochemical systems such as gene regulation
and cellular signaling are naturally inheritable via cell division.
Delbr\"{u}ck-Gillespie's mesoscopic reaction system theory, therefore, provides
a biochemical basis for spontaneous isogenetic switching and canalization.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
Mesoscopic Kinetic Basis of Macroscopic Chemical Thermodynamics: A Mathematical Theory
From a mathematical model that describes a complex chemical kinetic system of
species and elementrary reactions in a rapidly stirred vessel of size
as a Markov process, we show that a macroscopic chemical thermodynamics
emerges as . The theory is applicable to linear and
nonlinear reactions, closed systems reaching chemical equilibrium, or open,
driven systems approaching to nonequilibrium steady states. A generalized
mesoscopic free energy gives rise to a macroscopic chemical energy function
\varphi^{ss}(\vx) where \vx=(x_1,\cdots,x_N) are the concentrations of the
chemical species. The macroscopic chemical dynamics \vx(t) satisfies two
emergent laws: (1) (\rd/\rd t)\varphi^{ss}[\vx(t)]\le 0, and (2)(\rd/\rd
t)\varphi^{ss}[\vx(t)]=\text{cmf}(\vx)-\sigma(\vx) where entropy production
rate represents the sink for the chemical energy, and chemical
motive force is non-zero if the system is driven under a
sustained nonequilibrium chemostat. For systems with detailed balance
, and if one assumes the law of mass action,\varphi^{ss}(\vx)
is precisely the Gibbs' function
for ideal solutions. For a class of kinetic systems called complex balanced,
which include many nonlinear systems as well as many simple open, driven
chemical systems, the \varphi^{ss}(\vx), with global minimum at \vx^*, has
the generic form ,which has
been known in chemical kinetic literature.Macroscopic emergent "laws" are
independent of the details of the underlying kinetics. This theory provides a
concrete example from chemistry showing how a dynamic macroscopic law can
emerge from the kinetics at a level below.Comment: 8 page
Quantized VCG Mechanisms for Polymatroid Environments
Many network resource allocation problems can be viewed as allocating a
divisible resource, where the allocations are constrained to lie in a
polymatroid. We consider market-based mechanisms for such problems. Though the
Vickrey-Clarke-Groves (VCG) mechanism can provide the efficient allocation with
strong incentive properties (namely dominant strategy incentive compatibility),
its well-known high communication requirements can prevent it from being used.
There have been a number of approaches for reducing the communication costs of
VCG by weakening its incentive properties. Here, instead we take a different
approach of reducing communication costs via quantization while maintaining
VCG's dominant strategy incentive properties. The cost for this approach is a
loss in efficiency which we characterize. We first consider quantizing the
resource allocations so that agents need only submit a finite number of bids
instead of full utility function. We subsequently consider quantizing the
agent's bids
Landscapes of Non-gradient Dynamics Without Detailed Balance: Stable Limit Cycles and Multiple Attractors
Landscape is one of the key notions in literature on biological processes and
physics of complex systems with both deterministic and stochastic dynamics. The
large deviation theory (LDT) provides a possible mathematical basis for the
scientists' intuition. In terms of Freidlin-Wentzell's LDT, we discuss
explicitly two issues in singularly perturbed stationary diffusion processes
arisen from nonlinear differential equations: (1) For a process whose
corresponding ordinary differential equation has a stable limit cycle, the
stationary solution exhibits a clear separation of time scales: an exponential
terms and an algebraic prefactor. The large deviation rate function attains its
minimum zero on the entire stable limit cycle, while the leading term of the
prefactor is inversely proportional to the velocity of the non-uniform periodic
oscillation on the cycle. (2) For dynamics with multiple stable fixed points
and saddles, there is in general a breakdown of detailed balance among the
corresponding attractors. Two landscapes, a local and a global, arise in LDT,
and a Markov jumping process with cycle flux emerges in the low-noise limit. A
local landscape is pertinent to the transition rates between neighboring stable
fixed points; and the global landscape defines a nonequilibrium steady state.
There would be nondifferentiable points in the latter for a stationary dynamics
with cycle flux. LDT serving as the mathematical foundation for emergent
landscapes deserves further investigations.Comment: 4 figur
Sensitivity Amplification in the Phosphorylation-Dephosphorylation Cycle: Nonequilibrium steady states, chemical master equation and temporal cooperativity
A new type of cooperativity termed temporal cooperativity [Biophys. Chem. 105
585-593 (2003), Annu. Rev. Phys. Chem. 58 113-142 (2007)], emerges in the
signal transduction module of phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle (PdPC).
It utilizes multiple kinetic cycles in time, in contrast to allosteric
cooperativity that utilizes multiple subunits in a protein. In the present
paper, we thoroughly investigate both the deterministic (microscopic) and
stochastic (mesoscopic) models, and focus on the identification of the source
of temporal cooperativity via comparing with allosteric cooperativity.
A thermodynamic analysis confirms again the claim that the chemical
equilibrium state exists if and only if the phosphorylation potential
, in which case the amplification of sensitivity is completely
abolished. Then we provide comprehensive theoretical and numerical analysis
with the first-order and zero-order assumptions in
phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle respectively. Furthermore, it is
interestingly found that the underlying mathematics of temporal cooperativity
and allosteric cooperativity are equivalent, and both of them can be expressed
by "dissociation constants", which also characterizes the essential differences
between the simple and ultrasensitive PdPC switches. Nevertheless, the degree
of allosteric cooperativity is restricted by the total number of sites in a
single enzyme molecule which can not be freely regulated, while temporal
cooperativity is only restricted by the total number of molecules of the target
protein which can be regulated in a wide range and gives rise to the
ultrasensitivity phenomenon.Comment: 42 pages, 13 figure
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