Environmental and molecular noise buffering by the cyanobacterial clock in individual cells

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Abstract

Circadian clocks enable organisms to anticipate daily cycles, while being robust to molecular and environmental noise. Here, we show how the cyanobacterial clock buffers genetic and environmental perturbations through its core phosphorylation loop. We first characterise single-cell clock dynamics in clock mutants using a microfluidics device that allows precise control of the microenvironment. We find known clock regulators are dispensable for clock robustness, whilst perturbations of the core clock reveal that the wild-type operates at a noise optimum that we can reproduce in a stochastic model of just the core phosphorylation loop. We then examine how the clock responds to noisy environments, including natural light conditions. The model accurately predicts how the clock filters out environmental noise, including fast light fluctuations, to keep time while remaining responsive to environmental shifts. Our findings illustrate how a simple clock network can exhibit complex noise filtering properties, advancing our understanding of how biological circuits can perform accurately in natural environments.

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