4.4 Article

Stochastic enzyme kinetics and the quasi-steady-state reductions: Application of the slow scale linear noise approximation a la Fenichel

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00285-022-01768-6

Keywords

Singular perturbation; Stochastic process; Quasi-steady-state approximation; Michaelis-Menten reaction mechanism; Langevin equation; Linear noise approximation; Slow scale linear noise approximation

Funding

  1. University of Michigan Postdoctoral Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes Training Program Developmental Origins of Metabolic Disorder (NIH/NIDDK) [T32 DK071212]

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This paper studies the linear approximation model of noise in chemical reactions, derives the slow scale linear noise approximation from geometric singular perturbation theory, and explains the origins of different ssLNAs reported in the literature. The model is extended to a non-classical singular perturbed problem, disproving commonly-accepted qualifier for the validity of stochastic quasi-steady-state approximation of the Michaelis-Menten reaction mechanism.
The linear noise approximation models the random fluctuations from the mean-field model of a chemical reaction that unfolds near the thermodynamic limit. Specifically, the fluctuations obey a linear Langevin equation up to order Omega(-1/2), where Omega is the size of the chemical system (usually the volume). In the presence of disparate timescales, the linear noise approximation admits a quasi-steady-state reduction referred to as the slow scale linear noise approximation (ssLNA). Curiously, the ssLNAs reported in the literature are slightly different. The differences in the reported ssLNAs lie at the mathematical heart of the derivation. In this work, we derive the ssLNA directly from geometric singular perturbation theory and explain the origin of the different ssLNAs in the literature. Moreover, we discuss the loss of normal hyperbolicity and we extend the ssLNA derived from geometric singular perturbation theory to a non-classical singularly perturbed problem. In so doing, we disprove a commonly-accepted qualifier for the validity of stochastic quasi-steady-state approximation of the Michaelis -Menten reaction mechanism.

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