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Biological systems and pathway analysis An introduction
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Protein-Protein Interactions
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Post-genome informatics: Synthesis How does the organisation of living matter in space and time give rise to biological processes? Prediction of all interactions gagccagcgagccag cgcgcgcgggcgggc ggacagatcggagcc gagcggggccgggcg gggcgctccctgcag +
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Systems Biology Emergence Self-organisation Agent interactions Agents System Biological systems are modular (sub-systems) hierarchical multiscale (space and time) molecules pathways cells transcription, catalysis, P-P interaction, cross-talk, cell- cell signalling molecular complexes, pathways, networks, tissues a behaviour or property resulting from interaction and self-organisation interacting components (modules), ongoing relationships, can evolve
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Living cell Perturbation Dynamic response Global approaches: Systems Biology time!
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Living cell “Virtual cell” Perturbation Dynamic response Biological organisation (e.g., gene families, structural genomics, pathways) Global approaches: Systems Biology time! -omics time series
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Living cell “Virtual cell” Perturbation Dynamic response Biological organisation (e.g., gene families, structural genomics, pathways) Basic principles Practical applications Global approaches: Systems Biology Bioinformatics Mathematical modelling Simulation time! -omics time series
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Dynamic Pathway Models Forefront of the field of systems biology Types –Inter/intra-cellular –Metabolic networks –Gene networks –Signal transduction networks Two types of formalism appearing in the literature: –data mining e.g. genome expression at gene or protein level contribute to conceptualisations of pathways –simulations of established conceptualisations
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…from pathway interaction and molecular data …to dynamic models of pathway function Schoeberl et al., 2002 Dynamic models of cell signalling Erk1/Erk2 Mapk Signaling pathway
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Simulations: Dynamic Pathway Models These have recently come to the forefront due to emergence of high- throughput technologies. Composed of theorised/validated pathways with kinetic data attached to every connection - this enables one to simulate the change in concentrations of the components of the pathway over time given initial parameters. Schoeberl et al., 2002, Nat. Biotech. 20: 370
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Response Models × Signalling Pathways Models? Charasunti et al. (2004) –ODE model of the action of Gleevec on the Crk-1 pathway in Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia
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Dynamic biochemistry Biomolecular interactions Protein-ligand interactions Metabolism and signal transduction Databases and analysis tools Metabolic simulation Metabolic databases and simulation Dynamic models of cell signalling
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Types of Modelling Methods Stochastic approaches –Simple statistics –Bayesian Networks Deterministic –Boolean networks ODE approach –Iterations in a system Classification/Clustering approaches –Support Vector Machines –Neural Networks Hybrid Models – mixture of the above Ideker & Lauffenberger, 2003, TiB 21(6): 255-262
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BASIS BioCharon Bio Sketch Pad BioSpreadsheet BioUML BSTLab CADLIVE CellDesigner Cellerator Cellware Cytoscape DBsolve Dizzy E-CELL ESS Gepasi Jarnac JDesigner JigCell JSIM JWS Karyote* libSBML MathSBML MOMA Monod NetBuilder PathArt PathScout ProcessDB* SBW SCIpath SigPath Simpathica StochSim STOCKS TeraSim Trelis Virtual Cell WinSCAMP Pathway simulation and analysis software accessible from http://sbml.org/index.psp www.ucl.ac.uk/oncology/MicroCore/ microcore.htm
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Microarrays, Protein Pathways and SCIpath mRNA Microarray Technology Pathway Information Measure mRNA levels as approximation of genome expression
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https://www.ucl.ac.uk/oncology/MicroCore/microcore.htm
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SBML BioPAX Pathway builder MicroExpress maps microarray and proteomic data to pathway nodes External database links
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Dynamic information processing in the cancer cell ‘Pathway signatures’ Molecular signatures for pathways are needed (not only for single molecules)
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A p53 Pathway
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A protein in the pathway
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Upregulation of the protein’s gene e.g. this protein is upregulated in prostate cancer compared to normal cells
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Greater upregulation…
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Downregulation of the protein’s gene
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Greater downregulation…
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Leukaemia types
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Molecular basis of disease Biomedicine ‘after the human genome’ Current disease models Patient Molecular building blocks proteinsgenes
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Molecular basis of disease Biomedicine ‘after the human genome’ Patient Molecular building blocks proteinsgenes Current disease models Physiology Clinical data
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Computational modelling Biomedicine ‘after the human genome’ Complex disease models Patient Molecular building blocks proteinsgenes Disease manifestation in organs, tissues, cells Molecular organisation
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Tumour Systems Modelling Four major areas of focus: –Growth –Treatment Response –Pathway –Angiogenesis Levels of granularity and scope –Phenomenological mechanistic GROWTH RESPONSE ANGIOGENESIS PATHWAYS deliveryflow
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Growth Models Stamatakos et al. (1998) –3D simulation –Satisfactory agreement with in vitro experiments t = 240h Irradiation starts at t = 168h Proliferating: Mitosis: Necrotic Products: G0 Phase: Necrosis or Apoptotic
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Cellular Automata (CA) approaches Determination of local interaction rules Stamatakos et al. 1998, 2001 G1G1 SG2G2 MG0G0 N Cell death
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Stamatakos et al… Flowchart for the response of a single tumour cell to irradiation. Stamatakos et al., 2001, IEEE Trans. Inf. Tech. Biomed. 5(4)
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Physiome project “Virtual human” Simulation of complex models of cells, tissues and organs 40 years of mathematical modeling of electrophysiology and tissue mechanics New models will integrate large-scale gene expression profiles http://www.physiome.org/
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Physiome project cell organ patient Anatomy and integrative function, electrical dynamics Vessels, circulatory flow, exchanges, energy metabolism Cell models, ion fluxes, action potential, molecules, functional genomics
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