Article (Périodiques scientifiques)
Systems biology towards life in silico: mathematics of the control of living cells.
Westerhoff, Hans V.; KOLODKIN, Alexey; Conradie, Riaan et al.
2009In Journal of Mathematical Biology, 58 (1-2), p. 7-34
Peer reviewed
 

Documents


Texte intégral
JMathBiol-published.pdf
Postprint Éditeur (339.13 kB)
Demander un accès

Tous les documents dans ORBilu sont protégés par une licence d'utilisation.

Envoyer vers



Détails



Mots-clés :
Kinetics; Metabolomics; Models, Biological; Signal Transduction; Systems Biology; Thermodynamics
Résumé :
[en] Systems Biology is the science that aims to understand how biological function absent from macromolecules in isolation, arises when they are components of their system. Dedicated to the memory of Reinhart Heinrich, this paper discusses the origin and evolution of the new part of systems biology that relates to metabolic and signal-transduction pathways and extends mathematical biology so as to address postgenomic experimental reality. Various approaches to modeling the dynamics generated by metabolic and signal-transduction pathways are compared. The silicon cell approach aims to describe the intracellular network of interest precisely, by numerically integrating the precise rate equations that characterize the ways macromolecules' interact with each other. The non-equilibrium thermodynamic or 'lin-log' approach approximates the enzyme rate equations in terms of linear functions of the logarithms of the concentrations. Biochemical Systems Analysis approximates in terms of power laws. Importantly all these approaches link system behavior to molecular interaction properties. The latter two do this less precisely but enable analytical solutions. By limiting the questions asked, to optimal flux patterns, or to control of fluxes and concentrations around the (patho)physiological state, Flux Balance Analysis and Metabolic/Hierarchical Control Analysis again enable analytical solutions. Both the silicon cell approach and Metabolic/Hierarchical Control Analysis are able to highlight where and how system function derives from molecular interactions. The latter approach has also discovered a set of fundamental principles underlying the control of biological systems. The new law that relates concentration control to control by time is illustrated for an important signal transduction pathway, i.e. nuclear hormone receptor signaling such as relevant to bone formation. It is envisaged that there is much more Mathematical Biology to be discovered in the area between molecules and Life.
Disciplines :
Biochimie, biophysique & biologie moléculaire
Auteur, co-auteur :
Westerhoff, Hans V.
KOLODKIN, Alexey ;  VU University of Amsterdam > Molecular Cell Physiology
Conradie, Riaan
Wilkinson, Stephen J.
Bruggeman, Frank J.
Krab, Klaas
van Schuppen, Jan H.
Hardin, Hanna
Bakker, Barbara M.
Mone, Martijn J.
Rybakova, Katja N.
Eijken, Marco
van Leeuwen, Hans J. P.
Snoep, Jacky L.
Plus d'auteurs (4 en +) Voir moins
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Systems biology towards life in silico: mathematics of the control of living cells.
Date de publication/diffusion :
2009
Titre du périodique :
Journal of Mathematical Biology
ISSN :
0303-6812
Volume/Tome :
58
Fascicule/Saison :
1-2
Pagination :
7-34
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Disponible sur ORBilu :
depuis le 15 mai 2013

Statistiques


Nombre de vues
94 (dont 3 Unilu)
Nombre de téléchargements
0 (dont 0 Unilu)

citations Scopus®
 
67
citations Scopus®
sans auto-citations
41
OpenCitations
 
66
citations OpenAlex
 
84
citations WoS
 
65

Bibliographie


Publications similaires



Contacter ORBilu