Kalman-like Self-Tuned Sensitivity in Biophysical Sensing
ORAL
Abstract
Living organisms need to be sensitive to a changing environment while also ignoring uninformative environmental fluctuations. Here, we argue that living cells can navigate these conflicting demands by dynamically tuning their environmental sensitivity. We analyze the circadian clock in Synechococcus elongatus, showing that clock-metabolism coupling can detect mismatch between clock predictions and the day-night light cycle, temporarily raise the clock’s sensitivity to light changes, and thus re-entraining faster. We find analogous behavior in recent experiments on switching between slow and fast osmotic-stress-response pathways in yeast. In both cases, cells can raise their sensitivity to new external information in epochs of frequent challenging stress, much like a Kalman filter with adaptive gain in signal processing. Our work suggests a new class of experiments that probe the history dependence of environmental sensitivity in biophysical sensing mechanisms.
*KH thanks the JSMF for support via a postdoctoral fellowship. AM thanks the Simons foundation for support under the MMLS program.
–
Presenters
-
Kabir Husain
- University of Chicago
- Department of Physics, University of Chicago