Symmetry invariance for adapting biological systems

Autor: Eduardo D. Sontag, Uri Alon, Oren Shoval
Rok vydání: 2010
Předmět:
0209 industrial biotechnology
Property (philosophy)
Dynamical systems theory
media_common.quotation_subject
Gene regulatory network
FOS: Physical sciences
Context (language use)
02 engineering and technology
Systems and Control (eess.SY)
Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods
Adaptability
03 medical and health sciences
020901 industrial engineering & automation
FOS: Electrical engineering
electronic engineering
information engineering

FOS: Mathematics
Physics - Biological Physics
Mathematics - Optimization and Control
Sensory cue
Quantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)
030304 developmental biology
media_common
0303 health sciences
Complement (complexity)
Optimization and Control (math.OC)
Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph)
Modeling and Simulation
FOS: Biological sciences
Computer Science - Systems and Control
Biological system
Constant (mathematics)
Analysis
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1012.2782
Popis: For a general class of dynamical systems, this paper presents a necessary and sufficient charac- terization of invariance of transient responses to symmetries in inputs. A particular example of this property, scale-invariance or "fold-change detection" (FCD), has been shown to be exhibited in biological sensory systems ranging from bacterial chemotaxis pathways to signal transduction mechanisms in eukaryotes. The characterization is in terms of a notion of equivariance and amounts to the solvability of an associated partial differential equation. For several simple system motifs that are recurrent in biology, the solvability criterion may be checked explicitly. 1. Introduction. We study in this paper certain properties of the responses of dynamical systems to external inputs. Our results are purely mathematical and thus of wide applicability, but our motivation arises from molecular systems biology. Indeed, the behavior, adaptability, and survival of organisms depend critically upon their capability to formulate appropriate responses to chemical and physical environmental cues. In particular, signal transduction and gene regulatory networks in individual cells mediate the processing of measured chemical concentrations and physical conditions, such as ligand concentrations or stresses, eventually leading to regulatory changes in metabolism and gene expression. Often, the ultimate goal of these changes is to maintain a narrow range of concentration levels of vital quantities (homeostasis, adaptation) while at the same time appropriately reacting to changes in the environment (signal detection). Much theoretical, modeling, and analysis effort has been devoted to the understanding of these questions, traditionally in the context of steady-state responses to constant or step-changing stimuli. In this work, we are concerned with questions that complement the analysis of simple temporal inputs and steady-state responses, focusing on certain properties of transient be- haviors, both for simple stimuli like step changes and for more complex time-varying input profiles. The study of transient responses is of central concern in cell biology, since behavior at the time-scale of signaling may have important consequences for cell survival. Moreover, typical signals encountered by cells in their natural environments may well exhibit interest- ing temporal information, and thus characterizing responses to fluctuating temporal patterns
Databáze: OpenAIRE