CANCELED 4/13/07
CAM colloquium - Friday, April 13
3:30 p.m.
655 Rhodes Hall
Speaker: John J. TYSON, Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute & State University, Blacksburg, VA
Title: "NETWORK DYNAMICS AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY"
Abstract: Complex networks of interacting proteins
control the physiological properties of a cell (metabolism, reproduction,
motility, signaling, etc.). Intuitive reasoning about these networks
is often sufficient to guide the next experiment, and a cartoon drawing
of a network can be useful in codifying the results of hundreds of
observations. But what tools are available for understanding the rich
dynamical repertoire of such control systems? Why does a control system
behave the way it does? What other behaviors are possible? How do
these behaviors depend on the genetic and biochemical parameters of
the system (gene dosage, enzymatic rate constants, equilibrium binding
constants, etc)? Using basic principles of biochemical kinetics, we
convert network diagrams into sets of ordinary differential equations
and then explore their solutions by analytical and computational methods.
We illustrate this approach with a mathematical model of cell cycle
transitions in eukaryotes, based on a molecular network controlling
the activity of cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk). In this model, arrest
points in the cell cycle correspond to stable steady states of the
control system. As biochemical parameters of the control system change,
these arrest points are imposed or lifted by transitions called “bifurcations.”
During normal growth and division, cell size is the critical parameter
that drives progression from G1 to S/G2 to M phase and back to G1.
Simple diagrams, which correlate Cdk activity with cell growth, give
a new way of thinking about cell cycle control, particularly the role
of checkpoint pathways in arresting the cycle. The method is generally
applicable to any complex gene-protein network that regulates some
behavior of a living cell.
References:
Tyson, Chen & Novak (2001) Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 2:908-916
link
Tyson, Csikasz-Nagy & Novak (2002) BioEssays 24:1095-1109 link
Tyson, Chen & Novak (2003) Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 15:221-231 link
Csikasz-Nagy et al. (2006) Biophys. J. 90:4361-4379 link
Refreshments at 4:30 in 657 Rhodes Hall.