Journal
PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005429
Keywords
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Funding
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [PGSD2-471587-2015]
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences [4R01GM106189-04]
- Allen Distinguished Investigator Program through the Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group [11562]
- Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
- Division Of Physics [1522467] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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Many organisms navigate gradients by alternating straight motions (runs) with random reorientations (tumbles), transiently suppressing tumbles whenever attractant signal increases. This induces a functional coupling between movement and sensation, since tumbling probability is controlled by the internal state of the organism which, in turn, depends on previous signal levels. Although a negative feedback tends to maintain this internal state close to adapted levels, positive feedback can arise when motion up the gradient reduces tumbling probability, further boosting drift up the gradient. Importantly, such positive feedback can drive large fluctuations in the internal state, complicating analytical approaches. Previous studies focused on what happens when the negative feedback dominates the dynamics. By contrast, we show here that there is a large portion of physiologically-relevant parameter space where the positive feedback can dominate, even when gradients are relatively shallow. We demonstrate how large transients emerge because of non-normal dynamics (nonorthogonal eigenvectors near a stable fixed point) inherent in the positive feedback, and further identify a fundamental nonlinearity that strongly amplifies their effect. Most importantly, this amplification is asymmetric, elongating runs in favorable directions and abbreviating others. The result is a ratchet-like gradient climbing behavior with drift speeds that can approach half the maximum run speed of the organism. Our results thus show that the classical drawback of run-and-tumble navigation D wasteful runs in the wrong direction D can be mitigated by exploiting the non-normal dynamics implicit in the run-and-tumble strategy.
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