4.5 Article

Noise-induced Coherence in Multicellular Circadian Clocks

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 96, Issue 9, Pages 3573-3581

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2009.02.031

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Categories

Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  2. Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia [FIS2006-01197]
  3. Departament d'Universitats
  4. Recerca i Societat de la Informacio [2005-SGR/00653]
  5. Ministerio cle Ciencia y Tecnologia, Spain [BFI 200303489]
  6. Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia (Spain) [OR-DEN]
  7. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spain) [RD07/0060/0017]
  8. European Commission [043309]

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In higher organisms, circadian rhythms are generated by a multicellular genetic clock that is entrained very efficiently to the 24-h light-dark cycle. Most studies done so far of these circadian oscillators have considered a perfectly periodic driving by light, in the form of either a square wave or a sinusoidal modulation. However, in natural conditions, organisms are subject to nonnegligible fluctuations in the light level all through the daily cycle. In this article, we investigate how the interplay between light fluctuations and intercellular coupling affects the dynamics of the collective rhythm in a large ensemble of nonidentical, globally coupled cellular clocks modeled as Goodwin oscillators. On the basis of experimental considerations, we assume an inverse dependence of the cell-cell coupling strength on the light intensity, in such a way that the larger the light intensity, the weaker the coupling. Our results show a noise-induced rhythm generation for constant light intensities at which the clock is arrhythmic in the noise-free case. Importantly, the rhythm shows a resonancelike phenomenon as a function of the noise intensity. Such improved coherence can be only observed at the level of the overt rhythm and not at the level of the individual oscillators, thus suggesting a cooperative effect of noise, coupling, and the emerging synchronization between the oscillators.

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