Modeling the complexity of genetic networks: Understanding multigenic and pleiotropic regulation. (Q960447)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5474287
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    Modeling the complexity of genetic networks: Understanding multigenic and pleiotropic regulation.
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5474287

      Statements

      Modeling the complexity of genetic networks: Understanding multigenic and pleiotropic regulation. (English)
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      21 December 2008
      0 references
      Summary: Molecular genetics presents an increasingly complex picture of the genome and biological function. Evidence is mounting for distributed function, redundancy, and combinatorial coding in the regulation of genes. Satisfactory explanation will require the concept of a parallel processing signaling network. Here we provide an introduction to Boolean networks and their relevance to present-day experimental research. Boolean network models exhibit global complex behavior, self-organization, stability, redundancy and periodicity, properties that deeply characterize biological systems. While the life sciences must inevitably face the issue of complexity, we may well look to cybernetics for a modeling language such as Boolean networks which can manageably describe parallel processing biological systems and provide a framework for the growing accumulation of data. We finally discuss experimental strategies and database systems that will enable mapping of genetic networks. The synthesis of these approaches holds an immense potential for new discoveries on the intimate nature of genetic networks, bringing us closer to an understanding of complex molecular physiological processes like brain development, and intractable medical problems of immediate importance, such as neurodegenerative disorders, cancer, and a variety of genetic diseases.
      0 references
      molecular genetics
      0 references
      Boolean networks
      0 references
      attractors
      0 references
      genetic networks
      0 references
      gene expression
      0 references
      molecular signaling
      0 references
      development
      0 references
      molecular evolution
      0 references
      biological rhythms
      0 references

      Identifiers