RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A feedback loop of conditionally stable circuits drives the cell cycle from checkpoint to checkpoint JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 654863 DO 10.1101/654863 A1 Dávid Deritei A1 Jordan Rozum A1 Erzsébet Ravasz Regan A1 Réka Albert YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/06/02/654863.abstract AB We perform logic-based network analysis on a model of the mammalian cell cycle. This model is composed of a Restriction Switch driving cell cycle commitment and a Phase Switch driving mitotic entry and exit. By generalizing the concept of stable motif, i.e., a self-sustaining positive feedback loop that maintains an associated state, we introduce the concept of conditionally stable motif, the stability of which is contingent on external conditions. We show that the stable motifs of the Phase Switch are contingent on the state of three nodes through which it receives input from the rest of the network. Biologically, these conditions correspond to cell cycle checkpoints. Holding these nodes locked (akin to a checkpoint-free cell) transforms the Phase Switch into an autonomous oscillator that robustly toggles through the cell cycle phases G1, G2 and mitosis. The conditionally stable motifs of the Phase Switch Oscillator are organized into an ordered sequence, such that they serially stabilize each other but also cause their own destabilization. Along the way they channel the dynamics of the module onto a narrow path in state space, lending robustness to the oscillation. Self-destabilizing conditionally stable motifs suggest a general negative feedback mechanism leading to sustained oscillations.