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. 2014 Nov 24;111(49):17486–17491. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1411524111

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3.

Trade-offs in nonequilibrium sensing. (A) When two resources A and B compensate each other, one resource can always be decreased without affecting the sensing error, by increasing the other resource; concomitantly, increasing a resource will always reduce the sensing error. When both resources are instead fundamental, the sensing error is bounded by the limiting resource and cannot be reduced by increasing the other. (B and C) The three classes time/receptor copies, copies of downstream molecules, and energy are all required for sensing, with no trade-offs among them (Fig. 4). The minimum sensing error obtained by minimizing Eq. 2 is plotted for different combinations of (B) XT and w, and (C) RT(1+τr/τc) and w (SI Text). The curves track the bound for the limiting resource indicated by the gray lines, showing that the resources do not compensate each other. The plot for the minimum sensing error as a function of RT(1+τr/τc) and XT is identical to that of (C) with w replaced by XT. (D) The energy requirements for sensing. In the irreversible regime (Δμ), the work to take one sample of a ligand-bound receptor, w/(pN¯eff), equals Δμ, because each sample requires the turnover of one fuel molecule, consuming Δμ of energy. In the quasiequilibrium regime (Δμ0), each effective sample of the bound receptor requires 4kBT, which defines the fundamental lower bound on the energy requirement for taking a sample. When Δμ=0, the network is in equilibrium and both w and N¯eff are 0. ATP hydrolysis provides 20kBT, showing that phosphorylation of readout molecules makes it possible to store the receptor state reliably. The results are obtained from Eq. 3 with Δμ1=Δμ2=Δμ/2. (E) Sampling more than once per correlation time requires more resources, although the benefit is marginal. As the sampling rate is increased by increasing the readout copy number XT, the number of independent measurements N¯I saturates at the Berg–Purcell limit RTτr/τc, but the energy consumption and protein cost (XT) continue to rise.