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research article

Low-dimensional dynamics of two coupled biological oscillators

Droin, Colas  
•
Paquet, Eric R.
•
Naef, Felix  
October 1, 2019
Nature Physics

The circadian clock and the cell cycle are two biological oscillatory processes that coexist within individual cells. These two oscillators were found to interact, which can lead to their synchronization. Here, we develop a method to identify a low-dimensional stochastic model of the coupled system directly from time-lapse imaging in single cells. In particular, we infer the coupling and nonlinear dynamics of the two oscillators from thousands of mouse and human single-cell fluorescence microscopy traces. This coupling predicts multiple phase-locked states showing different degrees of robustness against molecular fluctuations inherent to cellular-scale biological oscillators. For the 1:1 state, the predicted phase-shifts following period perturbations were validated experimentally. Moreover, the phase-locked states are temperature-independent and evolutionarily conserved from mouse to human, hinting at a common underlying dynamical mechanism. Finally, we detect a signature of the coupled dynamics in a physiological context, explaining why tissues with different proliferation states exhibited shifted circadian clock phases.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41567-019-0598-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000488590700026

Author(s)
Droin, Colas  
Paquet, Eric R.
Naef, Felix  
Date Issued

2019-10-01

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Published in
Nature Physics
Volume

15

Issue

10

Start page

1086

End page

1094

Subjects

Physics, Multidisciplinary

•

Physics

•

circadian gene-expression

•

cell-cycle

•

clock

•

phase

•

rhythms

•

likelihood

•

division

•

reveals

•

time

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPNAE  
Available on Infoscience
October 17, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/162049
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