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4 - From simple periodic behaviour to complex oscillations, including bursting and chaos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2010

Albert Goldbeter
Affiliation:
Université Libre de Bruxelles
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Summary

A biochemical model with two instability mechanisms

In the two-variable models studied for glycolytic oscillations and birhythmicity, periodic behaviour originates from a unique instability mechanism based on the autocatalytic regulation of an allosteric enzyme by its reaction product. The question arises as to what happens when two instability-generating mechanisms are present and coupled within the same system: can new modes of dynamic behaviour arise from such an interaction?

An example of such a situation was considered at the end of the preceding chapter: the system with two oscillatory isozymes (fig. 3.23) contains two instability mechanisms coupled in parallel. Compared with the model based on a single product-activated enzyme, new behavioural modes may be observed, such as birhythmicity, hard excitation and multiple oscillatory domains as a function of a control parameter. The modes of dynamic behaviour in that model remain, however, limited, because it contains only two variables. For complex oscillations such as bursting or chaos to occur, it is necessary that the system contain at least three variables.

The coupling in series of two enzyme reactions with autocatalytic regulation (fig. 4.1) permits the construction of a three-variable biochemical prototype containing two instability-generating mechanisms (Decroly, 1987a,b; Decroly & Goldbeter, 1982). As in the model for glycolytic oscillations, the substrate S of the first enzyme is introduced at a constant rate into the system; this substrate is transformed by enzyme E1 into product P1, which serves as substrate for a second enzyme E2 that transforms P1 into P2. The two allosteric enzymes are both activated by their reaction product; P1 and P2 are thus positive effectors of enzymes Ex and E2, respectively.

Type
Chapter
Information
Biochemical Oscillations and Cellular Rhythms
The Molecular Bases of Periodic and Chaotic Behaviour
, pp. 118 - 160
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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