Issue 10, 2016

To grow is not enough: impact of noise on cell environmental response and fitness

Abstract

Quantitative single cell measurements have shown that cell cycle duration (the time between cell divisions) for diverse cell types is a noisy variable. The underlying distribution is mean scalable with a universal shape for many cell types in a variety of environments. Here we explore through both experiment and theory the response of these distributions to large environmental perturbations. In particular, we discuss how the stochasticity of the ensemble may be related to the response. Our findings show that slow growing, noisy populations are more adaptive than those which are fast growing. We suggest that even non-cooperative cells in exponential growth phase may not optimize fitness through growth rate alone, but also optimize adaptability to changing conditions. In this work, we wish to emphasize that in a manner similar to genetic evolution, noise in biochemical processes may be important to allow for cells to adapt to rapid to environmental changes.

Graphical abstract: To grow is not enough: impact of noise on cell environmental response and fitness

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Jun 2016
Accepted
17 Aug 2016
First published
24 Aug 2016

Integr. Biol., 2016,8, 1030-1039

Author version available

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