A simple negative interaction in the positive transcriptional feedback of a single gene is sufficient to produce reliable oscillations
Jes\'us M. Mir\'o-Bueno, Alfonso Rodr\'iguez-Pat\'on

TL;DR
This paper shows that a single gene with positive feedback can reliably produce oscillations when combined with a simple negative interaction, simplifying the design of genetic clocks.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a negative interaction acting on positive feedback in a single gene suffices for reliable oscillations, without needing complex mechanisms.
Findings
Negative interaction enables oscillations in single-gene feedback loops
System is robust to stochastic noise
Oscillations driven mainly by protein and repressor-protein complex
Abstract
Negative and positive transcriptional feedback loops are present in natural and synthetic genetic oscillators. A single gene with negative transcriptional feedback needs a time delay and sufficiently strong nonlinearity in the transmission of the feedback signal in order to produce biochemical rhythms. A single gene with only positive transcriptional feedback does not produce oscillations. Here, we demonstrate that this single-gene network in conjunction with a simple negative interaction can also easily produce rhythms. We examine a model comprised of two well-differentiated parts. The first is a positive feedback created by a protein that binds to the promoter of its own gene and activates the transcription. The second is a negative interaction in which a repressor molecule prevents this protein from binding to its promoter. A stochastic study shows that the system is robust to noise.…
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