Kalisky Tomer, Dekel Erez, Alon Uri
Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel.
Phys Biol. 2007 Nov 7;4(4):229-45. doi: 10.1088/1478-3975/4/4/001.
Cells respond to the environment by regulating the expression of genes according to environmental signals. The relation between the input signal level and the expression of the gene is called the gene regulation function. It is of interest to understand the shape of a gene regulation function in terms of the environment in which it has evolved and the basic constraints of biological systems. Here we address this by presenting a cost-benefit theory for gene regulation functions that takes into account temporally varying inputs in the environment and stochastic noise in the biological components. We apply this theory to the well-studied lac operon of E. coli. The present theory explains the shape of this regulation function in terms of temporal variation of the input signals, and of minimizing the deleterious effect of cell-cell variability in regulatory protein levels. We also apply the theory to understand the evolutionary tradeoffs in setting the number of regulatory proteins and for selection of feed-forward loops in genetic circuits. The present cost-benefit theory can be used to understand the shape of other gene regulatory functions in terms of environment and noise constraints.
细胞通过根据环境信号调节基因表达来响应环境。输入信号水平与基因表达之间的关系称为基因调控功能。从基因调控功能进化所处的环境以及生物系统的基本限制方面来理解其形状是很有意义的。在此,我们通过提出一种基因调控功能的成本效益理论来解决这个问题,该理论考虑了环境中随时间变化的输入以及生物组件中的随机噪声。我们将此理论应用于对大肠杆菌研究充分的乳糖操纵子。当前理论从输入信号的时间变化以及最小化调节蛋白水平中细胞间变异性的有害影响方面解释了这种调控功能的形状。我们还应用该理论来理解在设定调节蛋白数量以及在遗传回路中选择前馈环方面的进化权衡。当前的成本效益理论可用于从环境和噪声限制方面理解其他基因调控功能的形状。