Dynamic Environments as a Tool to Preserve Desired Output in a Chemical Reaction Network

Chemistry. 2020 Feb 3;26(7):1676-1682. doi: 10.1002/chem.201904725. Epub 2020 Jan 22.

Abstract

Current efforts to design functional molecular systems have overlooked the importance of coupling out-of-equilibrium behaviour with changes in the environment. Here, the authors use an oscillating reaction network and demonstrate that the application of environmental forcing, in the form of periodic changes in temperature and in the inflow of the concentration of one of the network components, removes the dependency of the periodicity of this network on temperature or flow rates and enforces a stable periodicity across a wide range of conditions. Coupling a system to a dynamic environment can thus be used as a simple tool to regulate the output of a network. In addition, the authors show that coupling can also induce an increase in behavioural complexity to include quasi-periodic oscillations.

Keywords: chemical reaction networks; enzymes; kinetics; nonequilibrium processes; systems chemistry.