Abstract

Two central biophysical laws describe sensory responses to input signals. One is a logarithmic relationship between input and output, and the other is a power law relationship. These laws are sometimes called the Weber-Fechner law and the Stevens power law, respectively. The two laws are found in a wide variety of human sensory systems including hearing, vision, taste, and weight perception; they also occur in the responses of cells to stimuli. However the mechanistic origin of these laws is not fully understood. To address this, we consider a class of biological circuits exhibiting a property called fold-change detection (FCD). In these circuits the response dynamics depend only on the relative change in input signal and not its absolute level, a property which applies to many physiological and cellular sensory systems. We show analytically that by changing a single parameter in the FCD circuits, both logarithmic and power-law relationships emerge; these laws are modified versions of the Weber-Fechner and Stevens laws. The parameter that determines which law is found is the steepness (effective Hill coefficient) of the effect of the internal variable on the output. This finding applies to major circuit architectures found in biological systems, including the incoherent feed-forward loop and nonlinear integral feedback loops. Therefore, if one measures the response to different fold changes in input signal and observes a logarithmic or power law, the present theory can be used to rule out certain FCD mechanisms, and to predict their cooperativity parameter. We demonstrate this approach using data from eukaryotic chemotaxis signaling.

Highlights

  • Biological sensory systems have been quantitatively studied for over 150 years

  • Together with information on the input-output relationship-e.g. is it a logarithmic or a power law relationship-we show that these conditions provide enough constraints to allow the researcher to reject certain circuit designs; it predicts, if one assumes a given design, one of its key parameters

  • We begin with a common gene regulation circuit [19] that can show foldchange detection (FCD), the incoherent type 1 feed-forward loop (I1-FFL) [10]

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Summary

Introduction

Biological sensory systems have been quantitatively studied for over 150 years. The response to a step increase in signal rises, reaches a peak response, and falls, adapting back to a baseline level, zst (Fig. 1a upper panel). Consider a step increase in input signal from I0 to I1, such that the relative change is DI RI : I ~ I1{I0. There are two commonly observed forms for the input-output relationship in sensory systems: logarithmic and power law. The relative peak response of the system Rz : Dz z ~. Zmax{zst zst is proportional not to the input level but to its logarithm Rz*log RI. A logarithmic scale of z versus I, namely Dz~log I, is often called the Weber-

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