Understanding bistability in complex enzyme-driven reaction networks
Top Cited Papers
- 6 June 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (23) , 8697-8702
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0602767103
Abstract
Much attention has been paid recently to bistability and switch-like behavior that might be resident in important biochemical reaction networks. There is, in fact, a great deal of subtlety in the relationship between the structure of a reaction network and its capacity to engender bistability. In common physicochemical settings, large classes of extremely complex networks, taken with mass action kinetics, cannot give rise to bistability no matter what values the rate constants take. On the other hand, bistable behavior can be induced in those same settings by certain very simple and classical mass action mechanisms for enzyme catalysis of a single overall reaction. We present a theorem that distinguishes between those mass action networks that might support bistable behavior and those that cannot. Moreover, we indicate how switch-like behavior results from a well-studied mechanism for the action of human dihydrofolate reductase, an important anti-cancer target.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signaling switches and bistability arising from multisite phosphorylation in protein kinase cascadesThe Journal of cell biology, 2004
- A positive-feedback-based bistable ‘memory module’ that governs a cell fate decisionNature, 2003
- EGFR activation coupled to inhibition of tyrosine phosphatases causes lateral signal propagationNature Cell Biology, 2003
- Testing a Mathematical Model of the Yeast Cell CycleMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2002
- A Model for a Network of Phosphorylation–dephosphorylation Cycles Displaying the Dynamics of Dominoes and ClocksJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2001
- How catalytic mechanisms reveal themselves in multiple steady-state data: I. Basic principlesJournal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical, 2000
- The macroworld versus the microworld of biochemical regulation and controlTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1995
- Dominoes and Clocks: the Union of Two Views of the Cell CycleScience, 1989
- Chemical reaction network structure and the stability of complex isothermal reactors—II. Multiple steady states for networks of deficiency oneChemical Engineering Science, 1988
- Chemical reaction network structure and the stability of complex isothermal reactors—I. The deficiency zero and deficiency one theoremsChemical Engineering Science, 1987