Information capacity of specific interactions
Publication information:
Miriam H. Huntley, Arvind Murugan, and Michael P. Brenner. 2016. “Information Capacity of Specific Interactions”. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113, 21, Pp. 5841–5846. doi:10.1073/pnas.1520969113
Abstract
Specific interactions are a hallmark feature of self-assembly and signal-processing systems in both synthetic and biological settings. Specificity between components may arise from a wide variety of physical and chemical mechanisms in diverse contexts, from DNA hybridization to shape-sensitive depletion interactions. Despite this diversity, all systems that rely on interaction specificity operate under the constraint that increasing the number of distinct components inevitably increases off-target binding. Here we introduce ``capacity,'' the maximal information encodable using specific interactions, to compare specificity across diverse experimental systems and to compute how specificity changes with physical parameters. Using this framework, we find that ``shape'' coding of interactions has higher capacity than chemical (''color'') coding because the strength of off-target binding is strongly sublinear in binding-site size for shapes while being linear for colors. We also find that different specificity mechanisms, such as shape and color, can be combined in a synergistic manner, giving a capacity greater than the sum of the parts.