Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.

Homeostatic and adaptive control mechanisms are essential for keeping organisms structurally and functionally stable. Integral feedback is a control theoretic concept which has long been known to keep a controlled variable A robustly (i.e. perturbation-independent) at a given set-point A(set) by fee...

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Main Authors: Kristian Thorsen, Oleg Agafonov, Christina H Selstø, Ingunn W Jolma, Xiao Y Ni, Tormod Drengstig, Peter Ruoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169565?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3f6369aecd174cf6acc516979d3b9e632020-11-25T02:42:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10776610.1371/journal.pone.0107766Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.Kristian ThorsenOleg AgafonovChristina H SelstøIngunn W JolmaXiao Y NiTormod DrengstigPeter RuoffHomeostatic and adaptive control mechanisms are essential for keeping organisms structurally and functionally stable. Integral feedback is a control theoretic concept which has long been known to keep a controlled variable A robustly (i.e. perturbation-independent) at a given set-point A(set) by feeding the integrated error back into the process that generates A. The classical concept of homeostasis as robust regulation within narrow limits is often considered as unsatisfactory and even incompatible with many biological systems which show sustained oscillations, such as circadian rhythms and oscillatory calcium signaling. Nevertheless, there are many similarities between the biological processes which participate in oscillatory mechanisms and classical homeostatic (non-oscillatory) mechanisms. We have investigated whether biological oscillators can show robust homeostatic and adaptive behaviors, and this paper is an attempt to extend the homeostatic concept to include oscillatory conditions. Based on our previously published kinetic conditions on how to generate biochemical models with robust homeostasis we found two properties, which appear to be of general interest concerning oscillatory and homeostatic controlled biological systems. The first one is the ability of these oscillators ("oscillatory homeostats") to keep the average level of a controlled variable at a defined set-point by involving compensatory changes in frequency and/or amplitude. The second property is the ability to keep the period/frequency of the oscillator tuned within a certain well-defined range. In this paper we highlight mechanisms that lead to these two properties. The biological applications of these findings are discussed using three examples, the homeostatic aspects during oscillatory calcium and p53 signaling, and the involvement of circadian rhythms in homeostatic regulation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169565?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristian Thorsen
Oleg Agafonov
Christina H Selstø
Ingunn W Jolma
Xiao Y Ni
Tormod Drengstig
Peter Ruoff
spellingShingle Kristian Thorsen
Oleg Agafonov
Christina H Selstø
Ingunn W Jolma
Xiao Y Ni
Tormod Drengstig
Peter Ruoff
Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kristian Thorsen
Oleg Agafonov
Christina H Selstø
Ingunn W Jolma
Xiao Y Ni
Tormod Drengstig
Peter Ruoff
author_sort Kristian Thorsen
title Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
title_short Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
title_full Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
title_fullStr Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
title_full_unstemmed Robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
title_sort robust concentration and frequency control in oscillatory homeostats.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Homeostatic and adaptive control mechanisms are essential for keeping organisms structurally and functionally stable. Integral feedback is a control theoretic concept which has long been known to keep a controlled variable A robustly (i.e. perturbation-independent) at a given set-point A(set) by feeding the integrated error back into the process that generates A. The classical concept of homeostasis as robust regulation within narrow limits is often considered as unsatisfactory and even incompatible with many biological systems which show sustained oscillations, such as circadian rhythms and oscillatory calcium signaling. Nevertheless, there are many similarities between the biological processes which participate in oscillatory mechanisms and classical homeostatic (non-oscillatory) mechanisms. We have investigated whether biological oscillators can show robust homeostatic and adaptive behaviors, and this paper is an attempt to extend the homeostatic concept to include oscillatory conditions. Based on our previously published kinetic conditions on how to generate biochemical models with robust homeostasis we found two properties, which appear to be of general interest concerning oscillatory and homeostatic controlled biological systems. The first one is the ability of these oscillators ("oscillatory homeostats") to keep the average level of a controlled variable at a defined set-point by involving compensatory changes in frequency and/or amplitude. The second property is the ability to keep the period/frequency of the oscillator tuned within a certain well-defined range. In this paper we highlight mechanisms that lead to these two properties. The biological applications of these findings are discussed using three examples, the homeostatic aspects during oscillatory calcium and p53 signaling, and the involvement of circadian rhythms in homeostatic regulation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169565?pdf=render
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