Complex systems can convert energy imparted by nonequilibrium forces to regulate how quickly they transition between long-lived states. While such behavior is ubiquitous in natural and synthetic systems, currently there is no general framework to relate the enhancement of a transition rate to the energy dissipated or to bound the enhancement achievable for a given energy expenditure. We employ recent advances in stochastic thermodynamics to build such a framework, which can be used to gain mechanistic insight into transitions far from equilibrium. We show that under general conditions, there is a basic speed limit relating the typical excess heat dissipated throughout a transition and the rate amplification achievable. We illustrate this tradeoff in canonical examples of diffusive barrier crossings in systems driven with autonomous and deterministic external forcing protocols. In both cases, we find that our speed limit tightly constrains the rate enhancement.
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Universal energy-accuracy tradeoffs in nonequilibrium cellular sensing
We combine stochastic thermodynamics, large deviation theory, and information theory to derive fundamental limits on the accuracy with which single cell receptors can estimate external concentrations. As expected, if the estimation is performed by an ideal observer of the entire trajectory of receptor states, then no energy consuming nonequilibrium receptor that can be divided into bound and unbound states can outperform an equilibrium two- state receptor. However, when the estimation is performed by a simple observer that measures the fraction of time the receptor is bound, we derive a fundamental limit on the accuracy of general nonequilibrium receptors as a function of energy consumption. We further derive and exploit explicit formulas to numerically estimate a Pareto-optimal tradeoff between accuracy and energy. We find this tradeoff can be achieved by nonuniform ring receptors with a number of states that necessarily increases with energy. Our results yield a thermodynamic uncertainty relation for the time a physical system spends in a pool of states and generalize the classic Berg- Purcell limit [H. C. Berg and E. M. Purcell, Biophys. J. 20, 193 (1977)] on cellular sensing along multiple dimensions.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1845166
- PAR ID:
- 10513488
- Publisher / Repository:
- Physical Review
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Physical Review E
- Volume:
- 108
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2470-0045
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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