A Thermodynamically consistent model of the post-translational Kai circadian clock
Joris Paijmans, David K Lubensky, Pieter Rein ten Wolde

TL;DR
This paper introduces a thermodynamically consistent model of the cyanobacterial circadian clock based on Kai protein phosphorylation, ATP hydrolysis, and conformational states, explaining experimental observations.
Contribution
It presents a novel statistical-mechanical model linking ATP hydrolysis and phosphorylation cycles to circadian timing in Kai proteins.
Findings
Model reproduces experimental phosphorylation patterns
Explains KaiA's role as a nucleotide exchange factor
Captures the timing of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation cycles
Abstract
The principal pacemaker of the circadian clock of the cyanobacterium S. elongatus is a protein phosphorylation cycle consisting of three proteins, KaiA, KaiB and KaiC. KaiC forms a homohexamer, with each monomer consisting of two domains, CI and CII. Both domains can bind and hydrolyze ATP, but only the CII domain can be phosphorylated, at two residues, in a well-defined sequence. While this system has been studied extensively, how the clock is driven thermodynamically has remained elusive. Inspired by recent experimental observations and building on ideas from previous mathematical models, we present a new, thermodynamically consistent, statistical-mechanical model of the clock. At its heart are two main ideas: i) ATP hydrolysis in the CI domain provides the thermodynamic driving force for the clock, switching KaiC between an active conformational state in which its phosphorylation…
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