DocumentCode
1317089
Title
Symmetry in biology: from genetic code to stochastic gene regulation
Author
Ramos, A.F. ; Innocentini, G.C.P. ; Forger, F.M. ; Hornos, J.E.M.
Author_Institution
Inst. de Fis. de Sao Carlos, Univ. de Sao Paulo, São Carlos, Brazil
Volume
4
Issue
5
fYear
2010
fDate
9/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
311
Lastpage
329
Abstract
Mathematical models, as instruments for understanding the workings of nature, are a traditional tool of physics, but they also play an ever increasing role in biology - in the description of fundamental processes as well as that of complex systems. In this review, the authors discuss two examples of the application of group theoretical methods, which constitute the mathematical discipline for a quantitative description of the idea of symmetry, to genetics. The first one appears, in the form of a pseudo-orthogonal (Lorentz like) symmetry, in the stochastic modelling of what may be regarded as the simplest possible example of a genetic network and, hopefully, a building block for more complicated ones: a single self-interacting or externally regulated gene with only two possible states: ´on´ and ´off´. The second is the algebraic approach to the evolution of the genetic code, according to which the current code results from a dynamical symmetry breaking process, starting out from an initial state of complete symmetry and ending in the presently observed final state of low symmetry. In both cases, symmetry plays a decisive role: in the first, it is a characteristic feature of the dynamics of the gene switch and its decay to equilibrium, whereas in the second, it provides the guidelines for the evolution of the coding rules.
Keywords
genetics; group theory; physiological models; symmetry; dynamical symmetry breaking; genetic code; genetics; pseudo-orthogonal symmetry; stochastic gene regulation; stochastic modelling;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems Biology, IET
Publisher
iet
ISSN
1751-8849
Type
jour
DOI
10.1049/iet-syb.2010.0058
Filename
5567075
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