Home | About Journal | Web Links | E-mail Alerts | RSS RSS Icon | Browse
Previous Article Next Article

Conversion of graded to binary response in an activator-repressor system

Source: Phys. Rev. E 81, 021905 (2010); doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.81.021905

Published 3 February 2010

PACS
  • 87.10.Mn
    Stochastic modelling (biological/medical physics)
  • YEAR: 2010
PUBLICATION DATA
ISSN:
1553-9628 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef APS
Rajesh Karmakar
Department of Physics, A.K.P.C. Mahavidyalaya, Subhasnagar, Bengai, Hooghly–712 611, India
Appropriate regulation of gene expression is essential to ensure that protein synthesis occurs in a selective manner. The control of transcription is the most dominant type of regulation mediated by a complex of molecules such as transcription factors. In general, regulatory molecules are of two types: activator and repressor. Activators promote the initiation of transcription whereas repressors inhibit transcription. In many cases, they regulate the gene transcription on binding the promoter mutually exclusively and the observed gene expression response is either graded or binary. In experiments, the gene expression response is quantified by the amount of proteins produced on varying the concentration of an external inducer molecules in the cell. In this paper, we study a gene regulatory network where activators and repressors both bind the same promoter mutually exclusively. The network is modeled by assuming that the gene can be in three possible states: repressed, unregulated, and active. An exact analytical expression for the steady-state probability distribution of protein levels is then derived. The exact result helps to explain the experimental observations that in the presence of activator molecules the response is graded at all inducer levels, whereas in the presence of both activator and repressor molecules, the response is graded at low and high inducer levels and binary at an intermediate inducer level. ©2010 The American Physical Society
History: Received 7 October 2009; published 3 February 2010
Permalink: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v81/e021905
ADVERTISEMENT