Eukaryotic Cells Are Dynamically Ordered or Critical but Not Chaotic

Two important theoretical approaches have been developed to generically characterize the relationship between the structure and function of large genetic networks: The continuous approach, based on reaction-kinetic differential equations, and the Boolean approach, based on difference equations and d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2005-09, Vol.102 (38), p.13439-13444
Hauptverfasser: Shmulevich, Ilya, Kauffman, Stuart A., Aldana, Maximino, Kadanoff, Leo P.
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container_issue 38
container_start_page 13439
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Shmulevich, Ilya
Kauffman, Stuart A.
Aldana, Maximino
Kadanoff, Leo P.
description Two important theoretical approaches have been developed to generically characterize the relationship between the structure and function of large genetic networks: The continuous approach, based on reaction-kinetic differential equations, and the Boolean approach, based on difference equations and discrete logical rules. These two approaches do not always coincide in their predictions for the same system. Nonetheless, both of them predict that the highly nonlinear dynamics exhibited by genetic regulatory systems can be characterized into two broad regimes, to wit, an ordered regime where the system is robust against perturbations, and a chaotic regime where the system is extremely sensitive to perturbations. It has been a plausible and long-standing hypothesis that genomic regulatory networks of real cells operate in the ordered regime or at the border between order and chaos. This hypothesis is indirectly supported by the robustness and stability observed in the phenotypic traits of living organisms under genetic perturbations. However, there has been no systematic study to determine whether the gene-expression patterns of real cells are compatible with the dynamically ordered regimes predicted by theoretical models. Using the Boolean approach, here we show what we believe to be the first direct evidence that the underlying genetic network of HeLa cells appears to operate either in the ordered regime or at the border between order and chaos but does not appear to be chaotic.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Biological Sciences
Biophysics
Boolean data
Cell lines
Cells
Chaos theory
Eukaryotic cells
Evolutionary genetics
Gene expression
Gene Expression Regulation
Genetics
HeLa Cells
Humans
Information retrieval noise
Mathematical sequences
Models, Genetic
Signal noise
Systems Biology - methods
Time series
title Eukaryotic Cells Are Dynamically Ordered or Critical but Not Chaotic
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