Precision of Protein Thermometry

ORAL

Abstract


Temperature sensing is a ubiquitous cell behavior, but the fundamental limits to the precision of temperature sensing are poorly understood. Unlike in chemical concentration sensing, the precision of temperature sensing is not limited by extrinsic fluctuations in the temperature field itself. Instead, we find that precision is limited by the intrinsic copy number, turnover, and binding kinetics of temperature-sensitive proteins. Developing a model based on the canonical TlpA protein, we find that a cell can estimate temperature to within 1% in the experimentally observed response time of one minute. We compare this prediction to experimental data on temperature sensitivity.

*This work was supported by Simons Foundation grant 376198 and National Science Foundation grant PHY-1945018.

Presenters

  • Michael Vennettilli

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh

Authors

  • Michael Vennettilli

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh
  • Soutick Saha

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University
  • Ushasi Roy

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University
  • Andrew Mugler

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh