2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session P7: Focus Session: Physics of Transcriptional Regulatory Networks
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 307
Sponsoring
Units:
GSNP DBP
Chair: Joshua Socolar, Duke University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.P7.4
Abstract: P7.00004 : Gene expression dynamics during cell differentiation: Cell fates as attractors and cell fate decisions as bifurcations*
1:03 PM–1:39 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Sui Huang
(Harvard Medical School)
During development of multicellular organisms, multipotent stem
and
progenitor cells undergo a series of hierarchically organized
``somatic
speciation'' processes consisting of binary branching events to
achieve the
diversity of discretely distinct differentiated cell types in
the body.
Current paradigms of genetic regulation of development do not
explain this
discreteness, nor the time-irreversibility of differentiation.
Each cell
contains the same genome with the same $N (\sim $ 25,000) genes
and each cell
type $k$ is characterized by a distinct stable gene activation
pattern,
expressed as the cell state vector $S_{k}(t)$ = {\{}$x_{k1}(t)
$,..
$x_{ki}(t)$,.. $x_{kN}(t)${\}}, where $x_{ki}$ is the
activation state of gene $i$ in
cell type $k$. Because genes are engaged in a network of mutual
regulatory
interactions, the movement of $S_{k}(t)$ in the $N$-dimensional
state space is
highly constrained and the organism can only realize a tiny
fraction of all
possible configurations $S_{k}$. Then, the trajectories of $S_
{k}$ reflect the
diversifying developmental paths and the mature cell types are
high-dimensional attractor states. Experimental results based
on gene
expression profile measurements during blood cell
differentiation using DNA
microarrays are presented that support the old idea that cell
types are
attractors. This basic notion is extended to treat binary fate
decisions as
bifurcations in the dynamics of networks circuits.
Specifically, during cell
fate decision, the metastable progenitor attractor is
destabilized, poising
the cell on a `watershed state' so that it can stochastically
or in response
to deterministic perturbations enter either one of two
alternative fates.
Overall, the model and supporting experimental data provide an
overarching
conceptual framework that helps explain how the specifics of
gene network
architecture produces discreteness and robustness of cell
types, allows for
both stochastic and deterministic cell fate decision and
ensures
directionality of organismal development.
*This work has been supported by the USAF/AFOSR
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.P7.4