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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2014/12/16/time-energy-and-storage-capacity-determine-the-measurement-accuracy-of-the-cell-computer/

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March 16th 2025
04:13:50

Whether it is bacteria searching for food or human cells that are differentiating into a brain cell, all living cells must respond to signals from their environment. These signals consist of chemical concentrations of nearby molecules. Cell computer Cells are able to measure these chemical concentrations with unprecedented precision thanks to receptor proteins on their surface, which bind to the surrounding molecules. A network of chemical reactions subsequently transmits the signal into the cell. These networks are the information processing machines of a living cell, comparable with a computer. Just like a computer, the cellular system needs time, energy and storage capacity to function. A large difference between a computer and a cellular measurement system is that cellular processes are very noisy, as a result of which it was not yet clear how cells can measure concentrations with such a high precision.

The AMOLF researchers have developed a theory that describes the accuracy of a concentration measurement based on the number of proteins present, the time and the energy that the cell invests in each measurement. The researchers first looked at passive cellular detection systems, which consume no energy. In these systems the amount of receptor proteins, the proteins that bind the surrounding molecules, limits the number of measurements the cell can perform. The cell computer takes an average of this number to determine the overall molecule concentration. To obtain a more accurate estimate of the concentration, the cellular system must remember measurements from the past. However, this requires time, energy and other proteins to store the information. To the researchers' surprise, these three resources determine the accuracy of the measurements like links in a chain. The precision is limited by the resource that is the least present. This observation led the researchers to a design principle not previously identified for this type of system: in an optimal measurement system all of the links are equally strong. The network that enables the bacterium optimal design. E. coli to find food was found to obey this principle. The researchers expect that this design logic of cellular systems can also be used to develop efficient synthetic systems and materials.

References
Energy dissipation and noise correlations in biochemical sensing , Chris Govern & Pieter Rein ten Wolde, Phys. Rev. Lett. (2014)
Optimal resource allocation in cellular sensing systems , Chris Govern & Pieter Rein ten Wolde, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (2014), 111/49 , 17486-17491. DOI 10.1073/pnas.1411524111

Contact
Prof. Pieter Rein ten Wolde +31 20 754 7281

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