Noise in Gene Expression Determines Cell Fate in Bacillus subtilis
New Jersey Institute of Technology · International Center for Public Health
Abstract
Random cell-to-cell variations in gene expression within an isogenic population can lead to transitions between alternative states of gene expression. Little is known about how these variations (noise) in natural systems affect such transitions. In Bacillus subtilis, noise in ComK, the protein that regulates competence for DNA uptake, is thought to cause cells to transition to the competent state in which genes encoding DNA uptake proteins are expressed. We demonstrate that noise in comK expression selects cells for competence and that experimental reduction of this noise decreases the number of competent cells. We also show that transitions are limited temporally by a reduction in comK transcription. These…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.12
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
3- HMHédia MaamarCorresponding
New Jersey Institute of Technology, International Center for Public Health
- ARArjun RajCorresponding
New Jersey Institute of Technology, International Center for Public Health
- DDDavid DubnauCorresponding
New Jersey Institute of Technology, International Center for Public Health
Topics & keywords
- Bacillus subtilis
- Gene
- Biology
- Gene expression
- Transcription (linguistics)
- Genetics
- Cell biology
- Population