posted on 2025-05-10, 09:23authored byDiego A. Oyarzun, Fernando Lopez-Caamal, Miriam R. Garcia, Richard MiddletonRichard Middleton, Andrea Y. Weisse
Quantifying signal transmission in biochemical systems is key to uncover the mechanisms that cells use to control their responses to environmental stimuli. In this work we use the time-integral of chemical species as a measure of a network’s ability to cumulatively transmit signals encoded in spatiotemporal concentrations. We identify a class of nonlinear reaction-diffusion networks in which the time-integrals of some species can be computed analytically. The derived time-integrals do not require knowledge of the solution of the reaction-diffusion equation, and we provide a simple graphical test to check if a given network belongs to the proposed class. The formulae for the time-integrals reveal how the kinetic parameters shape signal transmission in a network under spatiotemporal stimuli. We use these to show that a canonical complex-formation mechanism behaves as a spatial low-pass filter, the bandwidth of which is inversely proportional to the diffusion length of the ligand.
History
Journal title
PL o S One
Volume
8
Issue
5
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment
School
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science