Effect of molecular noise on the dynamics of tryptophan operon system in Escherichia coli
Citations
Altmetric:
Authors
Date
2007-12
Type
Conference Contribution - published
Collections
Fields of Research
Abstract
Noise in gene expression, or the variation in gene
expression in an isogenic population under a
homogeneous environment, has been of much
interest in recent years. Differences in gene
expression of two isogenic cells could be attributed
to the variation in factors determining gene
expression in these cells, such as transcription
factors, the concentration of operators, RNA
polymerase, the cell cycle, etc., which is termed
extrinsic noise. However, variation could still
persist even when all extrinsic noise is eliminated,
due to the limited number of molecules for typical
molecular species involved. The latter is termed
intrinsic noise. However, the implications of stochastic
gene expression are still not clear. There is very
little knowledge about the consequences of
stochasticity on particular systems.
Here, we seek to better understand what differences
may result from stochastic and deterministic kinetic
approaches to modelling genetic regulatory systems
by considering a model system of tryptophan (Trp)
operon system in Escherichia coli. This genetic
regulatory network is responsible for the production
of tryptophan amino acid inside the cells. The
molecular basis of the system is presented in the
introduction part of the paper. The development and
analysis of two stochastic models for the tryptophan
operon system are discussed in section 2 and 3. In
the first model we introduce molecular noise by
setting up stochastic differential equations using the
Langevin approach in which molecular fluctuation
in the form of white noise is explicitly considered.
The second stochastic model is based on the
Gillespie method. Due to the lack of data on kinetic
rates for elementary reaction steps of molecular
processes, the implementation of the Gillespie
method is carried out without decomposing the
deterministic mechanism into detailed reaction
steps. Simulation results from two versions of the
stochastic regimes are compared to their
deterministic counterpart.
We found that intrinsic fluctuations resulted from
molecular noise can destroy stable oscillatory
behaviour. In this case, a new value for the
bifurcation point is established, which is far from
the corresponding deterministic bifurcation point.
Moreover, we demonstrate that intrinsic noise can
enable the system to obtain qualitatively different
dynamics compared to when noise is absent.
Specifically, stable sustained oscillations are
obtained only when molecular noise is incorporated.
Quantification of noise strength for key molecular
species indicates that the transcription process
exhibits high fluctuation levels which subsequently
suggests that in order to reduce noise at the
tryptophan output level, one may consider speeding
up mRNA transcripts degradation.
Permalink
Source DOI
Rights
Copyright © The Authors. The responsibility for the contents of this paper rests upon the authors and not on the Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand Inc.