17,096 research outputs found

    Detailed simulations of cell biology with Smoldyn 2.1.

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    Most cellular processes depend on intracellular locations and random collisions of individual protein molecules. To model these processes, we developed algorithms to simulate the diffusion, membrane interactions, and reactions of individual molecules, and implemented these in the Smoldyn program. Compared to the popular MCell and ChemCell simulators, we found that Smoldyn was in many cases more accurate, more computationally efficient, and easier to use. Using Smoldyn, we modeled pheromone response system signaling among yeast cells of opposite mating type. This model showed that secreted Bar1 protease might help a cell identify the fittest mating partner by sharpening the pheromone concentration gradient. This model involved about 200,000 protein molecules, about 7000 cubic microns of volume, and about 75 minutes of simulated time; it took about 10 hours to run. Over the next several years, as faster computers become available, Smoldyn will allow researchers to model and explore systems the size of entire bacterial and smaller eukaryotic cells

    A structured approach for the engineering of biochemical network models, illustrated for signalling pathways

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    http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bib/bbn026Quantitative models of biochemical networks (signal transduction cascades, metabolic pathways, gene regulatory circuits) are a central component of modern systems biology. Building and managing these complex models is a major challenge that can benefit from the application of formal methods adopted from theoretical computing science. Here we provide a general introduction to the field of formal modelling, which emphasizes the intuitive biochemical basis of the modelling process, but is also accessible for an audience with a background in computing science and/or model engineering. We show how signal transduction cascades can be modelled in a modular fashion, using both a qualitative approach { Qualitative Petri nets, and quantitative approaches { Continuous Petri Nets and Ordinary Differential Equations. We review the major elementary building blocks of a cellular signalling model, discuss which critical design decisions have to be made during model building, and present ..

    An Introduction to Rule-based Modeling of Immune Receptor Signaling

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    Cells process external and internal signals through chemical interactions. Cells that constitute the immune system (e.g., antigen presenting cell, T-cell, B-cell, mast cell) can have different functions (e.g., adaptive memory, inflammatory response) depending on the type and number of receptor molecules on the cell surface and the specific intracellular signaling pathways activated by those receptors. Explicitly modeling and simulating kinetic interactions between molecules allows us to pose questions about the dynamics of a signaling network under various conditions. However, the application of chemical kinetics to biochemical signaling systems has been limited by the complexity of the systems under consideration. Rule-based modeling (BioNetGen, Kappa, Simmune, PySB) is an approach to address this complexity. In this chapter, by application to the Fcε\varepsilonRI receptor system, we will explore the origins of complexity in macromolecular interactions, show how rule-based modeling can be used to address complexity, and demonstrate how to build a model in the BioNetGen framework. Open source BioNetGen software and documentation are available at http://bionetgen.org.Comment: 5 figure

    Insights into the structure and dynamics of lysyl oxidase propeptide, a flexible protein with numerous partners

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    Lysyl oxidase (LOX) catalyzes the oxidative deamination of lysine and hydroxylysine residues in collagens and elastin, which is the first step of the cross-linking of these extracellular matrix proteins. It is secreted as a proenzyme activated by bone morphogenetic protein-1, which releases the LOX catalytic domain and its bioactive N-terminal propeptide. We characterized the recombinant human propeptide by circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and showed that it is elongated, monomeric, disordered and flexible (Dmax: 11.7 nm, Rg: 3.7 nm). We generated 3D models of the propeptide by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations restrained by SAXS data, which were used for docking experiments. Furthermore, we have identified 17 new binding partners of the propeptide by label-free assays. They include four glycosaminoglycans (hyaluronan, chondroitin, dermatan and heparan sulfate), collagen I, cross-linking and proteolytic enzymes (lysyl oxidase-like 2, transglutaminase-2, matrix metalloproteinase-2), a proteoglycan (fibromodulin), one growth factor (Epidermal Growth Factor, EGF), and one membrane protein (tumor endothelial marker-8). This suggests new roles for the propeptide in EGF signaling pathway

    Uniformly curated signaling pathways reveal tissue-specific cross-talks and support drug target discovery

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    Motivation: Signaling pathways control a large variety of cellular processes. However, currently, even within the same database signaling pathways are often curated at different levels of detail. This makes comparative and cross-talk analyses difficult. Results: We present SignaLink, a database containing 8 major signaling pathways from Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, and humans. Based on 170 review and approx. 800 research articles, we have compiled pathways with semi-automatic searches and uniform, well-documented curation rules. We found that in humans any two of the 8 pathways can cross-talk. We quantified the possible tissue- and cancer-specific activity of cross-talks and found pathway-specific expression profiles. In addition, we identified 327 proteins relevant for drug target discovery. Conclusions: We provide a novel resource for comparative and cross-talk analyses of signaling pathways. The identified multi-pathway and tissue-specific cross-talks contribute to the understanding of the signaling complexity in health and disease and underscore its importance in network-based drug target selection. Availability: http://SignaLink.orgComment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables and a supplementary info with 5 Figures and 13 Table

    Modeling and Simulation of Biological Systems through Electronic Design Automation techniques

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    Modeling and simulation of biological systems is a key requirement for integrating invitro and in-vivo experimental data. In-silico simulation allows testing different experimental conditions, thus helping in the discovery of the dynamics that regulate the system. These dynamics include errors in the cellular information processing that are responsible for diseases such as cancer, autoimmunity, and diabetes as well as drug effects to the system (Gonalves, 2013). In this context, modeling approaches can be classified into two categories: quantitative and qualitative models. Quantitative modeling allows for a natural representation of molecular and gene networks and provides the most precise prediction. Nevertheless, the lack of kinetic data (and of quantitative data in general) hampers its use for many situations (Le Novere, 2015). In contrast, qualitative models simplify the biological reality and are often able to reproduce the system behavior. They cannot describe actual concentration levels nor realistic time scales. As a consequence, they cannot be used to explain and predict the outcome of biological experiments that yield quantitative data. However, given a biological network consisting of input (e.g., receptors), intermediate, and output (e.g., transcription factors) signals, they allow studying the input-output relationships through discrete simulation (Samaga, 2013). Boolean models are gaining an increasing interest in reproducing dynamic behaviors, understanding processes, and predicting emerging properties of cellular signaling networks through in-silico experiments. They are emerging as a valid alternative to the quantitative approaches (i.e., based on ordinary differential equations) for exploratory modeling when little is known about reaction kinetics or equilibrium constants in the context of gene expression or signaling. Even though several approaches and software have been recently proposed for logic modeling of biological systems, they are limited to specific contexts and they lack of automation in analyzing biological properties such as complex attractors, and molecule vulnerability. This thesis proposes a platform based on Electronic Design Automation (EDA) technologies for qualitative modeling and simulation of Biological Systems. It aims at overtaking limitations that affect the most recent qualitative tools
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