Abstract
Abstract
Random fluctuations are often considered detrimental in the context of gene regulation. Studies aimed at discovering the noise-buffering strategies are important. In this study, we demonstrated a novel design of attenuating noise at protein-level. The protein-ligand interaction dramatically reduced noise so that the coefficient of variation (COV) became roughly 1/3. Remarkably, in comparison to the other two noise-buffering methods, the negative feedback control and the incoherent feedforward loop, the COV of the target protein in the case of protein-ligand interaction appeared to be less than 1/2 of that of the other two methods. The high correlation of the target protein and the ligand grants the present method great ability to buffer noise. Further, it buffers noise at the stage after translation so it is also capable of attenuating the noise inherited from the process of translation.
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