Abstract

Constructing biological networks capable of performing specific biological functionalities has been of sustained interest in synthetic biology. Adaptation is one such ubiquitous functional property, which enables every living organism to sense a change in its surroundings and return to its operating condition prior to the disturbance. In this paper, we present a generic systems theory-driven method for designing adaptive protein networks. First, we translate the necessary qualitative conditions for adaptation to mathematical constraints using the language of systems theory, which we then map back as 'design requirements' for the underlying networks. We go on to prove that a protein network with different input-output nodes (proteins) needs to be at least of third-order in order to provide adaptation. Next, we show that the necessary design principles obtained for a three-node network in adaptation consist of negative feedback or a feed-forward realization. We argue that presence of a particular class of negative feedback or feed-forward realization is necessary for a network of any size to provide adaptation. Further, we claim that the necessary structural conditions derived in this work are the strictest among the ones hitherto existed in the literature. Finally, we prove that the capability of producing adaptation is retained for the admissible motifs even when the output node is connected with a downstream system in a feedback fashion. This result explains how complex biological networks achieve robustness while keeping the core motifs unchanged in the context of a particular functionality. We corroborate our theoretical results with detailed and thorough numerical simulations. Overall, our results present a generic, systematic and robust framework for designing various kinds of biological networks.

Highlights

  • We argue that presence of a particular class of negative feedback or feed-forward realization is necessary for a network of any size to provide adaptation

  • Biological systems display a remarkable diversity of functionalities, many of which can be conceived as the response of a large network composed of small interconnecting modules

  • All living cells display a remarkable array of functions, which can be perceived as the response of a complex, multi-level biological network at a systems level

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Summary

Introduction

All living cells display a remarkable array of functions, which can be perceived as the response of a complex, multi-level biological network at a systems level. Graph-theoretic tools have found applications in analyzing and understanding biological networks as functional modules [5,6,7,8,9] It has been seen through experiments [10] that the design principles, for any given biological response, are relatively conserved across organisms [11]. An adaptive homeostasis network in higher organisms [12] uses a negative feedback control strategy [13], suggesting the importance of the role played by the network structure in realizing certain biological functionalities. This observation serves as an essential motivating factor behind the search for minimum networks capable of achieving a given biological functionality

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