5 resultados para Regulació cel·lular
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
In this work, the algebraic properties of the local transition functions of elementary cellular automata (ECA) were analysed. Specifically, a classification of such cellular automata was done according to their algebraic degree, the balancedness, the resiliency, nonlinearity, the propagation criterion and the existence of non-zero linear structures. It is shown that there is not any ECA satisfying all properties at the same time.
Resumo:
Estudio de la dinámica de una población donde los individuos son contribuyentes (pagadores de impuestos) o no mediante un autómata celular 2D
Resumo:
Connexin-43 (Cx43), a gap junction protein involved in control of cell proliferation, differentiation and migration, has been suggested to have a role in hematopoiesis. Cx43 is highly expressed in osteoblasts and osteogenic progenitors (OB/P). To elucidate the biologic function of Cx43 in the hematopoietic microenvironment (HM) and its influence in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) activity, we studied the hematopoietic function in an in vivo model of constitutive deficiency of Cx43 in OB/P. The deficiency of Cx43 in OB/P cells does not impair the steady state hematopoiesis, but disrupts the directional trafficking of HSC/progenitors (Ps) between the bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB). OB/P Cx43 is a crucial positive regulator of transstromal migration and homing of both HSCs and progenitors in an irradiated microenvironment. However, OB/P Cx43 deficiency in nonmyeloablated animals does not result in a homing defect but induces increased endosteal lodging and decreased mobilization of HSC/Ps associated with proliferation and expansion of Cxcl12-secreting mesenchymal/osteolineage cells in the BM HM in vivo. Cx43 controls the cellular content of the BM osteogenic microenvironment and is required for homing of HSC/Ps in myeloablated animals
Resumo:
A gene expression atlas is an essential resource to quantify and understand the multiscale processes of embryogenesis in time and space. The automated reconstruction of a prototypic 4D atlas for vertebrate early embryos, using multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization with nuclear counterstain, requires dedicated computational strategies. To this goal, we designed an original methodological framework implemented in a software tool called Match-IT. With only minimal human supervision, our system is able to gather gene expression patterns observed in different analyzed embryos with phenotypic variability and map them onto a series of common 3D templates over time, creating a 4D atlas. This framework was used to construct an atlas composed of 6 gene expression templates from a cohort of zebrafish early embryos spanning 6 developmental stages from 4 to 6.3 hpf (hours post fertilization). They included 53 specimens, 181,415 detected cell nuclei and the segmentation of 98 gene expression patterns observed in 3D for 9 different genes. In addition, an interactive visualization software, Atlas-IT, was developed to inspect, supervise and analyze the atlas. Match-IT and Atlas-IT, including user manuals, representative datasets and video tutorials, are publicly and freely available online. We also propose computational methods and tools for the quantitative assessment of the gene expression templates at the cellular scale, with the identification, visualization and analysis of coexpression patterns, synexpression groups and their dynamics through developmental stages.
Resumo:
Resulta interesante comprender como microorganismos sencillos como la bacteria Escherichia coli poseen mecanismos no tan simples para responder al entorno en el que está gestionada por complicadas redes de regulación formadas por genes y proteínas, donde cada elemento de la red genética debe tomar parte en armonía, en el momento justo y la cantidad adecuada para dar lugar a la respuesta celular apropiada. La biología sintética es un nuevo área de la biología y la tecnología que fusiona la biolog ía molecular, la ingeniería genética y las herramientas computacionales, para crear sistemas biológicos con funcionalidades novedosas. Los sistemas creados sintéticamente son ya una realidad, y cada vez se acumulan más trabajos alrededor del mundo que muestran su factibilidad. En este campo no solo se hacen pequeñas modificaciones en la información genética, sino que también se diseñan, manipulan e introducen circuitos genéticos a los organismos. Actualmente, se hace un gran esfuerzo para construir circuitos genéticos formados por numerosos genes y caracterizar la interacción de los mismos con otras moléculas, su regulaci ón, expresión y funcionalidad en diferentes organismos. La mayoría de los proyectos de biología sintética que se han desarrollado hasta ahora, se basan en el conocimiento actual del funcionamiento de los organismos vivos. Sin embargo, la información es numerosa y creciente, por lo que se requiere de herramientas computacionales y matem áticas para integrar y hacer manejable esta gran cantidad de información. El simulador de colonias bacterianas GRO posee la capacidad de representar las dinámicas más simples del comportamiento celular, tales como crecimiento, división y comunicación intercelular mediante conjugación, pero carece de la capacidad de simular el comportamiento de la colonia en presencia de un circuito genético. Para ello, se ha creado un nuevo módulo de regulación genética que maneja las interaciones entre genes y proteínas de cada célula ejecutando respuestas celulares específicas. Dado que en la mayoría de los experimentos intervienen colonias del orden de 105 individuos, es necesario un módulo de regulación genética simplificado que permita representar de la forma más precisa posible este proceso en colonias de tales magnitudes. El módulo genético integrado en GRO se basa en una red booleana, en la que un gen puede transitar entre dos estados, on (expresado) o off (reprimido), y cuya transición viene dada por una serie de reglas lógicas.---ABSTRACT---It is interesting to understand how simple organisms such as Escherichia coli do not have simple mechanisms to respond to the environment in which they find themselves. This response is managed by complicated regulatory networks formed by genes and proteins, where each element of the genetic network should take part in harmony, at the right time and with the right amount to give rise to the appropriate cellular response. Synthetic biology is a new area of biology and technology that combines molecular biology, genetic engineering and computational tools to create biological systems with novel features. The synthetically created systems are already a reality, and increasingly accumulate work around the world showing their feasibility. In this field not only minor changes are made in the genetic information but also genetic circuits designed, manipulated and introduced into the organisms. Currently, it takes great effort to build genetic circuits formed by numerous genes and characterize their interaction with other molecules, their regulation, their expression and their function in different organisms. Most synthetic biology projects that have been developed so far are based on the current knowledge of the functioning of living organisms. However, there is a lot of information and it keeps accumulating, so it requires computational and mathematical tools to integrate and manage this wealth of information. The bacterial colonies simulator, GRO, has the ability to represent the simplest dynamics of cell behavior, such as growth, division and intercellular communication by conjugation, but lacks the ability to simulate the behavior of the colony in the presence of a genetic circuit. To this end, a new genetic regulation module that handles interactions between genes and proteins for each cell running specific cellular responses has been created. Since most experiments involve colonies of about 105 individuals, a simplified genetic module which represent cell dynamics as accurately and simply as possible is needed. The integrated genetic GRO module is based on a Boolean network, in which a gene can be in either of two states, on (expressed) or off (repressed), and whose transition is given by a set of logical rules.