Limitations of steady state solutions to a two-state model of population oscillations and hole burning

2006 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. Payne ◽  
L. Deng ◽  
K. J. Jiang
Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
Jiaxin Chen ◽  
Feng Jiao

Gene transcription is a stochastic process manifested by fluctuations in mRNA copy numbers in individual isogenic cells. Together with mathematical models of stochastic transcription, the massive mRNA distribution data that can be used to quantify fluctuations in mRNA levels can be fitted by Pm(t), which is the probability of producing m mRNA molecules at time t in a single cell. Tremendous efforts have been made to derive analytical forms of Pm(t), which rely on solving infinite arrays of the master equations of models. However, current approaches focus on the steady-state (t→∞) or require several parameters to be zero or infinity. Here, we present an approach for calculating Pm(t) with time, where all parameters are positive and finite. Our approach was successfully implemented for the classical two-state model and the widely used three-state model and may be further developed for different models with constant kinetic rates of transcription. Furthermore, the direct computations of Pm(t) for the two-state model and three-state model showed that the different regulations of gene activation can generate discriminated dynamical bimodal features of mRNA distribution under the same kinetic rates and similar steady-state mRNA distribution.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krishna Choudhary ◽  
Atul Narang

ABSTRACTMechanistic models of stochastic gene expression are of considerable interest, but their complexity often precludes tractable analytical expressions for mRNA and protein distributions. The lac operon of E. coli is a model system with regulatory elements such as multiple operators and DNA looping that are shared by many operons. Although this system is complex, intuition suggests that fast DNA looping may simplify it by causing the repressor-bound states of the operon to equilibrate rapidly, thus ensuring that the subsequent dynamics are governed by slow transitions between the repressor-free and the equilibrated repressor-bound states. Here, we show that this intuition is correct by applying singular perturbation theory to a mechanistic model of lac transcription with the scaled time constant of DNA looping as the perturbation parameter. We find that at steady state, the repressor-bound states satisfy detailed balance and are dominated by the looped states; moreover, the interaction between the repressor-free and the equilibrated repressor-bound states is described by an extension of the Peccoud-Ycart two-state model in which both (repressor-free and repressor-bound) states support transcription. The solution of this extended two-state model reveals that the steady state mRNA distribution is a mixture of the Poisson and negative hypergeometric distributions which reflects mRNAs obtained by transcription from the repressor-bound and repressor-free states, respectively. Finally, we show that the physics revealed by perturbation theory makes it easy to derive the extended two-state model equations for complex regulatory architectures.


1989 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 536-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josef Chmelík ◽  
Pavel Anzenbacher ◽  
Vítěz Kalous

The renaturation of the two main components of human serum albumin, i.e. of mercaptalbumin and nonmercaptalbumin, was studied polarographically. It has been demonstrated that renaturation of both proteins after 1-min denaturation in 8M urea is reversible. By contrast, renaturation after 200 min denaturation in 8M urea is an irreversible process; the characteristics of renatured mercaptalbumin differ more from the properties of the native protein than the characteristics of nonmercaptalbumin. The studies of the kinetics of renaturation of both proteins have shown that the renaturation can be represented by a two-state model. This means that the existence of stable intermediary products during the renaturation process was not determined polarographically.


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