University of Illinois Chicago
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Regulatory Mechanisms in Biological Oscillator Circuits

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posted on 2022-12-01, 00:00 authored by Chaitra Agrahar
Oscillatory processes are used throughout cell biology to control time-varying physiology including the cell cycle, circadian rhythms, and developmental patterning. It has long been understood that free- running oscillations require feedback loops where the activity of one component depends on the concentration of another. Oscillator motifs have been classified by the positive or negative net logic of these loops. However, each feedback loop can be implemented by regulation of either the production step or the removal step. These possibilities are not equivalent because of the underlying structure of biochemical kinetics. By computationally searching over these possibilities, we find that certain molecular implementations are much more likely to produce stable oscillations. These preferred molecular implementations are found in many natural systems, but not typically in artificial oscillators, suggesting a design principle for future synthetic biology. Finally, we develop an approach to oscillator function across different reaction networks by evaluating the biosynthetic cost needed to achieve a given phase coherence. This analysis predicts that phase drift is most efficiently suppressed by delayed negative feedback loop architectures that operate without positive feedback.

History

Advisor

Rust, Michael Joseph

Chair

Ansari, Anjum

Department

Physics

Degree Grantor

University of Illinois at Chicago

Degree Level

  • Doctoral

Degree name

PhD, Doctor of Philosophy

Committee Member

Schlossman, Mark Murugan, Arvind Khalili-Araghi, Fatemeh

Submitted date

December 2022

Thesis type

application/pdf

Language

  • en

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