ROBUSTNESS in Biological Systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

ROBUSTNESS in Biological Systems

Description:

ROBUSTNESS in Biological Systems. Are Biochemical networks delicately balanced? ... How does it evolve within various aspects of biological systems? def. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:196
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: Levi
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ROBUSTNESS in Biological Systems


1
ROBUSTNESS in Biological Systems
  • Are Biochemical networks delicately balanced?

2
Robustness in Biological Systems
  • Common issues
  • How is it achieved?
  • How does it evolve within various aspects of
    biological systems?
  • def. Systems that are robust maintain their
    state and function against external and internal
    perturbations.

3
Robustness in Biological Systems
  • Robustness is an essential feature of biological
    systems
  • Robust systems are insensitive to internal
    parameter changes
  • Able to adapt to changes in the environment
  • Even damage may just produce minor alterations

4
Properties of Highly Robust Systems
  • Feedback
  • Bacteria Chemotaxis
  • P53-based cell-cycle arrest
  • Modularity
  • Spatial Localization of biochemical networks
  • Redundancy
  • Circadian Oscillator
  • Structural Stability
  • Archetypal genetic switch (the lambda phage
    decision circuit)
  • Drosophila embryogenesis

5
I. Bacterial Chemotaxis
  • Robustness thru feedback.

6
Bio-organisms are Responsive
  • Networks of interacting proteins demonstrate the
    responsiveness of living cells to a variety of
    external stimuli.
  • But if living cells are so responsive, does that
    make them (including us) too sensitive to slight
    changes in the stimuli?
  • For example, an abrupt change in chemical signals.

7
Two Possibilities
  • Either nature is designed to be very sensitive to
    inputs (which is consistent with its
    responsiveness), OR
  • It is actually very robust, and is in fact very
    insensitive to the precise values of its
    parameters or inputs!

8
Bacteria Chemotaxis
  • chemotaxis -
  • cell movement caused by chemical
    stimulus movement or change in the position of a
    cell or organism in response to the presence of a
    chemical agent

9
Bacteria Chemotaxis
  • In this case, changes in the stimuli do not
    hamper an organisms performance.
  • It actually helps the organism survive.
  • Bacteria such as E. Coli bias their swimming
    motion towards specific attractants, and away
    from repellents.

10
Information about the chemical environment is
transduced into the cells by chemoreceptors. INPU
T chemical environment. FEEDBACK or OUTPUT
tumbling motions to swim towards or away the
stimulus
11
II. The Circadian Oscillator
  • From the Latin circa about, and dies day
  • Circadian rhythm is a periodicity of about 24
    hours this is exhibited by biological organisms
  • Contained within cells which contain a particular
    molecular clockwork

12
The Circadian Oscillator
  • Such cells use molecular loops that are sealed
    within the cell itself it cannot therefore be
    affected by external factors
  • Consequently, circadian clock cells dont need
    cell-to-cell or cell-to-environment interactions
    to keep time

13
The Circadian Oscillator
  • The best known examples
  • eyes of some marine mollusks
  • retina of amphibians
  • mammalian suprachiasmatic nucleus
  • pineal gland of nonmammalian vertebrates,
    particularly those of birds.
  • Example pineal glands removed from sparrows
    (MPRCO)

14
Core Model (simplistic)
nuclear Gene transcription protein (Pn)
nRNA (Mp)
Protein (Po)
P2
P1
15
How it works
  • The model incorporates gene transcription,
    transport of mRNA (MP) into the cytosol where it
    is translated into the clock protein (Po) and
    degraded. The clock protein can be reversibly
    phos-phorylated from the form P0 into the forms
    P1 and P2, successively.

16
But theres Molecular Noise
  • As the number of molecules decreases, ? the above
    system fluctuates in its timing
  • Noise produced is proportional to 1/sqrt(N),
    where N is the no. of molecules

17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
Circadian Robustness
  • Robustness increases in proportion to the number
    of molecules in the system.
  • With few molecules, the standard deviation in the
    oscillation is much greater, but
  • With many molecules, the average oscillations
    approach the circadian value, or the correct
    frequency

20
III. The ? Phage circuit
  • Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus 1 (PBCV-1)
    negatively stained with uranyl acetate. The
    smaller particles are lambda phage.

21
Gene Regulatory Circuits
  • Regulatory Circuits are also called Decision
    Circuits.
  • These often persist in alternative stable states
  • These are switches in the sense that they can
    move from one stable state to another
  • if the input signals reach a certain threshold.

22
Is ? Phage Robust?
  • A bigger question is, Are Biochemical networks
    delicately balanced?
  • Independent experiments on the ? Phage decision
    circuit altered what were thought to be
    essential components.
  • A complex site called the OR region contains many
    of the events believed to control most of the
    regulatory behaviors.

23
Section A is a map of the OR region. Note that 3
sub regions are OR1, OR2, and OR3. PR promoter
that transcribes cI PRM promoter that
transcribes cro
24
? Phage Experiment
  • Binding of cI is tight to OR1, weak to OR3, and
    cooperative to OR2.
  • Cro binds equally well to OR1 and OR3.
  • To test robustness, the binding patterns of cro
    and cI were disrupted, and the resulting circuit
    regulation was studied
  • Results demonstrate that the qualitative pattern
    of ? gene regulation persists despite these
    changes.

25
(No Transcript)
26
? Experiment Conclusion
  • Biochemical networks are not delicately balanced,
    but can continue to function over a range of
    parameters.
  • Despite assuming the crucial role of differential
    repressor binding (in the OR region), this turns
    out to be non-essential in ?-regulation.

27
? Experiment Conclusion
  • It may be that the OR region is likely a
    fine-tuning of the circuitry for optimal
    behavior.
  • Its stable switching action arises from the
    structure of its network, rather than the
    specific affinities of its binding site Kitano
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com