Compartmentalization into biochemically distinct organelles constantly
exchanging material is one of the hallmarks of eukaryotic cells. In the most
naive picture of inter-organelle transport driven by concentration gradients,
concentration differences between organelles should relax. We determine the
conditions under which cooperative transport, i.e. based on molecular
recognition, allows for the existence and maintenance of distinct organelle
identities. Cooperative transport is also shown to control the flux of material
transiting through a compartmentalized system, dramatically increasing the
transit time under high incoming flux. By including chemical processing of the
transported species, we show that this property provides a strong functional
advantage to a system responsible for protein maturation and sorting.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure