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Hauptverfasser: Witteveen, Olivier, Rosen, Samuel J., Lach, Ryan S., Wilson, Maxwell Z., Bauer, Marianne
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.22633
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author Witteveen, Olivier
Rosen, Samuel J.
Lach, Ryan S.
Wilson, Maxwell Z.
Bauer, Marianne
author_facet Witteveen, Olivier
Rosen, Samuel J.
Lach, Ryan S.
Wilson, Maxwell Z.
Bauer, Marianne
contents Populations of cells regulate gene expression in response to external signals, but their ability to make reliable collective decisions is limited by both intrinsic noise in molecular signaling and variability between individual cells. In this work, we use optogenetic control of the canonical Wnt pathway as an example to study how reliably information about an external signal is transmitted to a population of cells, and determine an optimal encoding strategy to maximize information transmission from Wnt signals to gene expression. We find that it is possible to reach an information capacity beyond 1 bit only through an appropriate, discrete encoding of signals: using either no Wnt, a short Wnt pulse, or a sustained Wnt signal. By averaging over an increasing number of outputs, we systematically vary the effective noise in the pathway. As the effective noise decreases, the optimal encoding comprises more discrete input signals. These signals do not need to be fine-tuned to achieve near-optimal information transmission. The optimal code transitions into a continuous code in the small-noise limit, which can be shown to be consistent with the Jeffreys prior. We visualize the performance of different signal encodings using decoding maps. Our results suggest optogenetic Wnt signaling allows for regulatory control beyond a simple binary switch, and provides a framework to apply ideas from information processing to single-cell in vitro experiments.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_22633
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Optimizing information transmission in optogenetic Wnt signaling
Witteveen, Olivier
Rosen, Samuel J.
Lach, Ryan S.
Wilson, Maxwell Z.
Bauer, Marianne
Biological Physics
Molecular Networks
Populations of cells regulate gene expression in response to external signals, but their ability to make reliable collective decisions is limited by both intrinsic noise in molecular signaling and variability between individual cells. In this work, we use optogenetic control of the canonical Wnt pathway as an example to study how reliably information about an external signal is transmitted to a population of cells, and determine an optimal encoding strategy to maximize information transmission from Wnt signals to gene expression. We find that it is possible to reach an information capacity beyond 1 bit only through an appropriate, discrete encoding of signals: using either no Wnt, a short Wnt pulse, or a sustained Wnt signal. By averaging over an increasing number of outputs, we systematically vary the effective noise in the pathway. As the effective noise decreases, the optimal encoding comprises more discrete input signals. These signals do not need to be fine-tuned to achieve near-optimal information transmission. The optimal code transitions into a continuous code in the small-noise limit, which can be shown to be consistent with the Jeffreys prior. We visualize the performance of different signal encodings using decoding maps. Our results suggest optogenetic Wnt signaling allows for regulatory control beyond a simple binary switch, and provides a framework to apply ideas from information processing to single-cell in vitro experiments.
title Optimizing information transmission in optogenetic Wnt signaling
topic Biological Physics
Molecular Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.22633