Literature DB >> 12465890

Saturation of enzyme kinetics in circadian clock models.

Gen Kurosawa1, Yoh Iwasa.   

Abstract

From the mathematical study of simple models for circadian rhythm, the authors identified a clear effect of saturation in the enzyme kinetics on the promotion or suppression of a sustained oscillation. In the models, a clock gene (per gene) is transcribed to produce mRNAs, which are translated to produce proteins in the cytosol which are then transported to the nucleus and suppress the transcription of the gene. The negative feedback loop with a long time delay creates sustained oscillation. All the enzymatic reactions (e.g., degradation, translation, and modification) are assumed to be of Michaelis-Menten type. The reaction rate increases with the amount of substrate but saturates when it is very large. The authors prove mathematically that the saturation in any of the reactions included in the feedback loop (in-loop reaction steps) suppresses the oscillation, whereas the saturation of both degradation steps and the back transport of the protein to cytosol (branch reaction steps) makes the oscillation more likely to occur. In the experimental measurements of enzyme kinetics and in published circadian clock simulators, in-loop reaction steps have a small saturation index whereas branch reaction steps have a large saturation index.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12465890     DOI: 10.1177/0748730402238239

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Rhythms        ISSN: 0748-7304            Impact factor:   3.182


  19 in total

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8.  Robustness from flexibility in the fungal circadian clock.

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Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2010-06-24

9.  Stability of Wake-Sleep Cycles Requires Robust Degradation of the PERIOD Protein.

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Review 10.  Protein sequestration versus Hill-type repression in circadian clock models.

Authors:  Jae Kyoung Kim
Journal:  IET Syst Biol       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 1.615

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