Many cellular functions are based on the rhythmic organization of biological
processes into self-repeating cascades of events. Some of these periodic
processes, such as the cell cycles of several species, exhibit conspicuous
irregularities in the form of period skippings, which lead to polymodal
distributions of cycle lengths. A recently proposed mechanism that accounts for
this quantized behavior is the stabilization of a Hopf-unstable state by
molecular noise. Here we investigate the effect of varying noise in a model
system, namely an excitable activator-repressor genetic circuit, that displays
this noise-induced stabilization effect. Our results show that an optimal noise
level enhances the regularity (coherence) of the cycles, in a form of coherence
resonance. Similar noise levels also optimize the multimodal nature of the
cycle lengths. Together, these results illustrate how molecular noise within a
minimal gene regulatory motif confers robust generation of polymodal patterns
of periodicity.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure