A self-organized model for cell-differentiation based on variations of molecular decay rates
Rudolf Hanel, Manfred P\"ochacker, Manuel Sch\"olling, and Stefan, Thurner

TL;DR
This paper introduces a self-organized model of genetic regulatory networks that explains how variations in molecular decay rates influence cell differentiation and expression dynamics, aligning with recent experimental findings.
Contribution
It presents a novel model linking decay rates to gene expression modes and cell differentiation, enhancing understanding of molecular dynamics in systems biology.
Findings
Model reproduces homeostasis and multi-stability.
Explains the role of decay rates in differentiation.
Highlights decay rate control mechanisms in cells.
Abstract
Systemic properties of living cells are the result of molecular dynamics governed by so-called genetic regulatory networks (GRN). These networks capture all possible features of cells and are responsible for the immense levels of adaptation characteristic to living systems. At any point in time only small subsets of these networks are active. Any active subset of the GRN leads to the expression of particular sets of molecules (expression modes). The subsets of active networks change over time, leading to the observed complex dynamics of expression patterns. Understanding of this dynamics becomes increasingly important in systems biology and medicine. While the importance of transcription rates and catalytic interactions has been widely recognized in modeling genetic regulatory systems, the understanding of the role of degradation of biochemical agents (mRNA, protein) in regulatory…
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