Oscillation (cell signaling)

Oscillations are an important type of cell signaling characterized by the periodic change of the system in time.[1] Oscillations can take place in a biological system in a multitude of ways. Positive feedback loops, on their own or in combination with negative feedback are a common feature of oscillating biological systems.[2]

Examples

Genetic oscillation

One of the most common forms of biological oscillation is genetic oscillation, which can take place when a transcription factor binds and represses its own promoter. This type of regulatory system is able to successfully describe the NFkB-IkB and p53-Mdm52 biological oscillating systems.[1]

Relaxation oscillations

Relaxation oscillation takes place in the context of a bi-stable system. It is characterized by the periodic switching between two stable states.[2]

gollark: Not really.
gollark: `mcdex` can already kind of install from manifests; it just doesn't let you directly without a slightly annoying step.
gollark: I mostly use bash when it's just "run some shell commands and interpolate a variable or two", and otherwise python.
gollark: Batch, I mean.
gollark: Yes, it is, but it's evil and I'm never using it.

References

  1. Kruse & Jülicher. Oscillations in Biology. 2005
  2. Kholodenko. Cell-signaling dynamics in time and space. 2006
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