Limits of feedback control in bacterial chemotaxis
Yann S. Dufour, Xiongfei Fu, Luis Hernandez-Nunez, Thierry Emonet

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limits of feedback control in bacterial chemotaxis, revealing how behavioral feedback influences sensor performance, optimal operational regimes, and the role of motor adaptation and phenotypic diversity in navigation efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces analytical models and simulations to identify optimal feedback regimes in bacterial chemotaxis, highlighting the effects of behavioral feedback and motor adaptation on navigation performance.
Findings
Optimal pathway regime maximizes drift velocity across environments
Feedback can induce bifurcations leading to non-chemotactic states
Phenotypic diversity benefits navigation robustness
Abstract
Inputs to signaling pathways can have complex statistics that depend on the environment and on the behavioral response to previous stimuli. Such behavioral feedback is particularly important in navigation. Successful navigation relies on proper coupling between sensors, which gather information during motion, and actuators, which control behavior. Because reorientation conditions future inputs, behavioral feedback can place sensors and actuators in an operational regime different from the resting state. How then can organisms maintain proper information transfer through the pathway while navigating diverse environments? In bacterial chemotaxis, robust performance is often attributed to the zero integral feedback control of the sensor, which guarantees that activity returns to resting state when the input remains constant. While this property provides sensitivity over a wide range of…
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