Noise induces hopping between NF-κB entrainment modes

Heltberg, Mathias ; Kellogg, Ryan A. ; Krishna, Sandeep ; Tay, Savaş ; Jensen, Mogens H. (2016) Noise induces hopping between NF-κB entrainment modes Cell Systems, 3 (6). 532-539.e3. ISSN 2405-4712

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2016.11.014

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2016.11.014

Abstract

Oscillations and noise drive many processes in biology, but how both affect the activity of the transcription factor nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) is not understood. Here, we observe that when NF-κB oscillations are entrained by periodic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inputs in experiments, NF-κB exhibits jumps between frequency modes, a phenomenon we call "cellular mode-hopping." By comparing stochastic simulations of NF-κB oscillations to deterministic simulations conducted inside and outside the chaotic regime of parameter space, we show that noise facilitates mode-hopping in all regimes. However, when the deterministic system is driven by chaotic dynamics, hops between modes are erratic and short-lived, whereas in experiments, the system spends several periods in one entrainment mode before hopping and rarely visits more than two modes. The experimental behavior matches our simulations of noise-induced mode-hopping outside the chaotic regime. We suggest that mode-hopping is a mechanism by which different NF-κB-dependent genes under frequency control can be expressed at different times.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Cell systems.
ID Code:137532
Deposited On:09 Sep 2025 06:32
Last Modified:09 Sep 2025 06:32

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