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Nature 448, 947-951 (23 August 2007) | doi:10.1038/nature06072; Received 12 March 2007; Accepted 6 July 2007

There is a Erratum (20 December 2007) associated with this document.

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The effects of molecular noise and size control on variability in the budding yeast cell cycle

Stefano Di Talia1,2, Jan M. Skotheim2, James M. Bean1,3, Eric D. Siggia2 & Frederick R. Cross1

  1. The Rockefeller University,
  2. Center for Studies in Physics and Biology, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021, USA
  3. Present address: Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10021, USA.

Correspondence to: Frederick R. Cross1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to F.R.C. (Email: fcross@mail.rockefeller.edu).

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Molecular noise in gene expression can generate substantial variability in protein concentration1. However, its effect on the precision of a natural eukaryotic circuit such as the control of cell cycle remains unclear. We use single-cell imaging of fluorescently labelled budding yeast to measure times from division to budding (G1) and from budding to the next division. The variability in G1 decreases with the square root of the ploidy through a 1N/2N/4N ploidy series, consistent with simple stochastic models for molecular noise. Also, increasing the gene dosage of G1 cyclins decreases the variability in G1. A new single-cell reporter for cell protein content allows us to determine the contribution to temporal G1 variability of deterministic size control (that is, smaller cells extending G1). Cell size control contributes significantly to G1 variability in daughter cells but not in mother cells. However, even in daughters, size-independent noise is the largest quantitative contributor to G1 variability. Exit of the transcriptional repressor Whi5 from the nucleus partitions G1 into two temporally uncorrelated and functionally distinct steps. The first step, which depends on the G1 cyclin gene CLN3, corresponds to noisy size control that extends G1 in small daughters, but is of negligible duration in mothers. The second step, whose variability decreases with increasing CLN2 gene dosage, is similar in mothers and daughters. This analysis decomposes the regulatory dynamics of the Start transition into two independent modules, a size sensing module and a timing module, each of which is predominantly controlled by a different G1 cyclin.

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