The emergence of the two cell fates and their associated switching for a negative auto-regulating gene
Zhenlong Jiang, Li Tian, Xiaona Fang, Kun Zhang, Qiong Liu, Qingzhe, Dong, Erkang Wang, Jin Wang

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how microenvironment-induced regulation of a self-repressing gene can lead to the emergence of two distinct cell fates and their switching dynamics, revealing a new mechanism for cellular heterogeneity.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism showing how environmental factors modulate gene regulation to produce multiple cell fates without genetic alterations.
Findings
Two cell fates emerge from regulation changes
Switching dynamics are quantitatively characterized
Microenvironment influences cell fate decisions
Abstract
Decisions in the cell that lead to its ultimate fate are important for cellular functions such as proliferation, growth, differentiation, development and death. Understanding this decision process is imperative for advancements in the treatment of diseases such as cancer. It is clear that underlying gene regulatory networks and surrounding environments of the cells are crucial for function. The self-repressor is a very abundant gene regulatory motif, and is often believed to have only one cell fate. In this study, we elucidate the effects of microenvironments mimicking the epigenetic effects on cell fates through the introduction of inducers capable of binding to a self-repressing gene product (protein), thus regulating the associated gene. This alters the effective regulatory binding speed of the self-repressor regulatory protein to its destination DNA without changing the gene itself.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGene Regulatory Network Analysis · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology
