Abstract

BackgroundFeedback regulation plays crucial roles in the robust control and maintenance of many cellular systems. Negative feedbacks are found to underline both stable and unstable, often oscillatory, behaviours. We explore the dynamical characteristics of systems with single as well as coupled negative feedback loops using a combined approach of analytical and numerical techniques. Particularly, we emphasise how the loop's characterising factors (strength and cooperativity levels) affect system dynamics and how individual loops interact in the coupled-loop systems.ResultsWe develop an analytical bifurcation analysis based on the stability and the Routh- Hurwitz theorem for a common negative feedback system and a variety of its variants. We demonstrate that different combinations of the feedback strengths of individual loops give rise to different dynamical behaviours. Moreover, incorporating more negative feedback loops always tend to enhance system stability. We show that two mechanisms, in addition to the lengthening of pathway, can lower the Hill coefficient to a biologically plausible level required for sustained oscillations. These include loops coupling and end-product utilisation. We find that the degradation rates solely affect the threshold Hill coefficient for sustained oscillation, while the synthesis rates have more significant roles in determining the threshold feedback strength. Unbalancing the degradation rates between the system species is found as a way to improve stability.ConclusionThe analytical methods and insights presented in this study demonstrate that reallocation of the feedback loop may or may not make the system more stable; the specific effect is determined by the degradation rates of the newly inhibited molecular species. As the loop moves closer to the end of the pathway, the minimum Hill coefficient for oscillation is reduced. Furthermore, under general (unequal) values of the degradation rates, system extension becomes more stable only when the added species degrades slower than it is being produced; otherwise the system is more prone to oscillation. The coupling of loops significantly increases the richness of dynamical bifurcation characteristics. The likelihood of having oscillatory behaviour is directly determined by the loops' strength: stronger loops always result in smaller oscillatory regions.

Highlights

  • Feedback regulation plays crucial roles in the robust control and maintenance of many cellular systems

  • We found that systems L23 and L33 are both incapable of having oscillatory dynamics, regardless of their parameter values

  • We present below the analytical condition governing this bifurcation

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Summary

Introduction

Feedback regulation plays crucial roles in the robust control and maintenance of many cellular systems. Many examples of negative feedback systems exist: (1) regulatory pathways: the main repressor of the SOS regulon in bacteria Escherichia coli, LexA, represses its own production [5]; the Hes oscillator represses its own transcription [6]; the p53-Mdm network with p53 activates the Mdm gene and Mdm sequesters p53 [7]; and the tryptophan operon system with multiple negative feedback regulations [8]; (2) metabolic pathways: in the linear mandelate-acetate pathway in Pseudomonas fluorescens the acetate represses seven preceding reactions [9,10]; and, (3) signaling pathways: the NF-kB signalling pathway in which nuclear NF-kB activates production of IkBα which in turn inhibits nuclear import of NF-kB by sequestering it in the cytoplasm [11]; and circadian clocks [12] These feedback loops orchestrate the molecular fluxes in multi-scale manner so that the organisms survive and thrive in many different environments

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